Neil Kinnock on Jeremy Corbyn: "He spent 33 years talking to people who already agreed with him"

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  • Опубликовано: 11 июн 2023
  • Join us for the next instalment of our Unlocked series, as Professor Anand Menon sits down with former Labour leader, European Commissioner and stalwart of British politics, The Rt Hon Lord Kinnock.
    Neil will be joining us to reflect on his time as Labour leader and assess Keir Starmer’s chances of getting the keys to number 10 at the next election, consider Britain’s place in the world after Brexit, and give his take on the state of British politics.

Комментарии • 704

  • @PaddyDixieTheMinerva82
    @PaddyDixieTheMinerva82 Год назад +143

    I'm an ex Royal Navy senior rate and Falklands veteran.
    I've witnessed a lot of genuine leadership and a lot of control freak authoritarianism posing as it. Fortunately for us sailors the latter were usually flushed out.
    I NEVER hear any of these grandees and those who mimic them qualify or substantiate any of their head voice opinions on Corbyn. I never hear them characterise this 'leadership' issue they harp on about Corbyn lacking.
    And interviewers like this never scrutinise them on it or get them to elaborate on their views.
    My instinct tells me that it is because they haven't got the faintest idea what leadership is and are mollycoddled by a complicit media who are equally as inadequate and afraid of being exposed as the frauds they are.
    You only have to hear the bitterness in the tone and pedantic spitefulness in the language to know how aware these cretins are of their own pitiful shortcomings.

    • @billdoor3140
      @billdoor3140 Год назад

      As someone who comes from a Military family myself (blackwatch) corbyn imo was vile. He actively despised our armed forces. I'd say having a walking lump like Diane Abbott waddling around wearing two left shoes on election day. As his home secretary showed lack of leadership alone. I'd suggest not listening to the majority of working class people on immigration and choosing a hone secretary who wanted open door policy is lacking leadership. I'd say trying to cling onto power after taking labour to a 100 year low general election is lacking leadership. Personally I wouldn't be able to think of a more lacking person to lead.

    • @lynnevenables7193
      @lynnevenables7193 11 месяцев назад +8

      Thank you for putting it so precisely. 👌

    • @californiadreamin8423
      @californiadreamin8423 11 месяцев назад

      Well I’ll put it precisely…..Why would the Leader of the Labour Party….Corbyn….impose à 3 Line whip to support a minority Tory government get Article 50 through parliament, betraying Labour policy and making working people poorer.
      There you are , I’ve just substantiated why Corbyn leadership sucked. Over to you…..or did you lose the ability to think for yourself wondering why Thatcher hadn’t sent a sub down to the South Atlantic in good time….or even used the British press to lie , something they are very good at, lie to the world , that we did have a sub on patrol. Did that ever cross your mind ?

    • @user-sf7kl9uh7k
      @user-sf7kl9uh7k 10 месяцев назад

      He was a useless leader, bitter and twisted

    • @fintonmainz7845
      @fintonmainz7845 9 месяцев назад +4

      I'd love to have a few pints with you and listen to your views on "leadership" (good and bad) gleamed from your experiences in the Navy. I'm sure I'd learn plenty.

  • @gordonwellard1415
    @gordonwellard1415 Год назад +95

    Read what Tony Benn says about Kinnock in his diaries..it's not complimentary...he thought much more of Jeremy Corbyn...Kinnocks father was coalminer..he must have been turning in his grave over Neil's cowardly approach to that industrial dispute.....he would have done little for ordinary workers if he had become PM....

    • @ceesmith
      @ceesmith 10 месяцев назад +2

      Yes, cause mining is such a noble thing isn't it? You've never been down one, have you?

    • @AbandonEarth911
      @AbandonEarth911 10 месяцев назад

      Now Baron Windbag Kinnock sat in the House of Lords and Frauds, this traitor spent a lot more than 33 years betraying the working class.

    • @AbandonEarth911
      @AbandonEarth911 9 месяцев назад

      Kinnock this Anti socialist Anti working class bootlicker now sat in the house of frauds, what a despicable Parasite.

    • @gijgij4541
      @gijgij4541 6 месяцев назад +1

      Benn - Corbyn love in: QUELLE SURPRISE!

    • @user-sf7kl9uh7k
      @user-sf7kl9uh7k 4 месяца назад

      Will Islington North pick another slice of Clown Corbyn 🤡 ?

  • @yemenishawlahsa1256
    @yemenishawlahsa1256 11 месяцев назад +20

    Tony benn and Jeremy Corbyn in a government would have been the best 2 genuinely good people who say how it is neil kinnock did nothing.

    • @denzel270
      @denzel270 11 месяцев назад +3

      We would of become like North Korea.

    • @scooby1992
      @scooby1992 9 месяцев назад +1

      Tony Benn was in Gvt and d id a good job when he was Technology Minister.

    • @23715
      @23715 5 месяцев назад +1

      He helped to make the Labour Party electable. Shame on him.

    • @Raukura42
      @Raukura42 4 месяца назад

      But no one would vote for them, not enough to form a government. As Healey said if Benn was so right why did labour keep losing from 1979 for 18 years. Then Blair gets in, another ten years of Thatcher lite.

  • @mango4ttwo635
    @mango4ttwo635 Год назад +72

    Corbyn at General election without many Scottish votes after the Indyref implosion took 40% and 32%; Kinnock who still had luxury of Scottish votes before Indyref took 31% and 34%

    • @billdoor3140
      @billdoor3140 Год назад

      Corbyn led us to the worst defeat in 100 years. Anyone defending that dopey lump or his pet Abbott waddling around wearing two left shoes seriously need to shut up

    • @californiadreamin8423
      @californiadreamin8423 11 месяцев назад +3

      And ?

    • @mango4ttwo635
      @mango4ttwo635 11 месяцев назад +8

      @@californiadreamin8423 er, let me walk you through this. He did better than Kinnock TWICE and in less helpful circumstances. Therefore, Neil Pillock has a nerve calling out someone else for not getting results, when Mr Pillock got worse

    • @californiadreamin8423
      @californiadreamin8423 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@mango4ttwo635 It’s immaterial. What’s the average of 79 and 81 ?

    • @mango4ttwo635
      @mango4ttwo635 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@californiadreamin8423
      Your q is immaterial to the issue.
      the average of 31 and 34 is 32.5
      utter shite, and that is just the numbers. the politics was worse

  • @bradleycooper1609
    @bradleycooper1609 Год назад +73

    Kinnock did no Stick up for coal miner's against Thatcher just feathered his own nest and his son is just the same. A Torie with a red tie 🇬🇧🧐

    • @commonsense9176
      @commonsense9176 Год назад +3

      Definitely his my local mp bloody useless

    • @michaelharrison3602
      @michaelharrison3602 11 месяцев назад

      That describes 90% of Labour MPs think about it Blair,multi millionaire property baron.Corbbyn multi millionaire property owner. Abbot multi millionaire property owner.think about it none of them started of rich they become rich working as MPs
      Do the maths if Corbyn saved every penny he earned over forty years as an MP even before tax it wouldn't come close to what he's worth and how many people do you know who can save every penny they earn unless they're on the fiddle somehow:living on their expenses avoiding tax accepting back handers having other jobs
      Investing their entire MP's salary in high interest investments in nasty capiitalist banks. Politics is a career where people with no visible skills or talents can become very rich I hate Tories but hearing people like Corbyn, Abbot etc describe them as career politicians is sickening they all are many of them would be lucky to get a job in McDonald's many Labour MPs have never known anything that could be described as labour u
      Wealthy upper middle class privately educated posh boys who just about managed to graduate with a mediocre degree and realised that they'd never succeed in the business world they had no sporting skills. Theyd never win BGT but still desperately wanted to be rich and famous. "Oh I know I'll go into politics £85,000 a year to sit in the chamber taking a nap and occasionally getting up during PMQs and talking fo five minutes ain't a bad place to start. Then you become leader of some committee or other, like momentum then leader of the party you're earning nearly as much as the PM You just don't get the rent free house in Downing Street or the pile in the cotswolds "chequers" but that's the next step upwards.
      This has nothing to do with the party formed by Kier Hardy as the Labour representative committee to help the working classes. The classes that Corbyn vonsidersshit on his shoes uneducated oiks

    • @DMG0011
      @DMG0011 9 месяцев назад +1

      "Tory"

    • @AbandonEarth911
      @AbandonEarth911 9 месяцев назад

      Lord Kinnock Anti working class Anti socialist bootlicking parasite.

    • @user-sf7kl9uh7k
      @user-sf7kl9uh7k 8 месяцев назад

      We have as a nation turned our backs on coal, thank goodness

  • @briandelaney9710
    @briandelaney9710 9 месяцев назад +47

    Tony Benn had a point about Kinnock. That he had given up all his beliefs only to find that no one believed a word he said in the end. Sad

    • @growinsane9123
      @growinsane9123 8 месяцев назад

      In the video, Kinnock talks about the enthusiasm of young activists in momentum, he likens them to himself and many others like him when they were younger. He chooses his words carefully because he knows full well, as he also describes, that the process of political change is driven by meeting with the wider party and determining policy and he admonished Corbyn for being completely absent in any effort to influencee others EXCEPT toward those who already felt the same way.
      When you critique Kinnock for giving up his beliefs and indeed you may be right there is an element of that, you might also entertain the idea that he actually did start changing his mind through experience, he learned that a perfect set of beliefs were more often the enemy of a good set of beliefs. i.e, he was willing to trade on some of his younger heartfelt ideals to make actual political progress.
      This doesn't put him apart from Corbyn as much as some might suppose, I am sure you know that Corbyn was a Euroskeptic and a constant critic of NATO, but even he managed to keep those elements of his past supressed in exchange for potentially wider party and electoral appeal.
      Corbyn surprised everyone in 2017, celebrating a more narrow loss as a victory, but he was going up against a political lightweight. As people got to see more, rather than his ratings improve further they declined and then of course we get to 2019 where going up against a more formiddable political opponent he was obliterated at the ballot box.
      When you think that Kinnock was facing what still from an electoral perspective was a very successful Tory tenure, he did remarkably well. Blair pushed that advantage further when the public had finally exhausted themselves with John Major and he benefited from being significantly more charming.
      I do feel the politicians from that era, from all sides were better quality wise. Whilst Thatcher was far more intelligent than Kinnock, when I listen back to Kinnock, you do get a sense that he was still leaps ahead of Starmer.
      None of what I am sayng is supposed to lend support to any particular leader, ideal or party.

    • @Concreteowl
      @Concreteowl 6 месяцев назад +1

      Kinnock prospered well after setting the stage for the war criminal. The British people less so.

    • @blue47er
      @blue47er 6 месяцев назад

      @@growinsane9123 And got incredibly rich from his EU commissioners job, in which he achieved nothing of any merit. A Welsh windbag, and very little else.

    • @winterstronghold2197
      @winterstronghold2197 6 месяцев назад +3

      !But was more electable

    • @BionicRasta
      @BionicRasta 4 месяца назад

      The same can be said about Keir Starmer oddly enough

  • @andrewhouston5434
    @andrewhouston5434 11 месяцев назад +23

    What an embarising man is Kinnock. Never true labour.

    • @MrHammoreds
      @MrHammoreds 11 месяцев назад

      When you say "Never true Labour" what do you mean? Do you mean a party for left wing idealists that will never be electable in this country, by any chance?

    • @user-sf7kl9uh7k
      @user-sf7kl9uh7k 8 месяцев назад

      True Labour's just about losing.

  • @carllingard4987
    @carllingard4987 Год назад +156

    So according to Kinnock, Corbyn never left a record of his presence in his career. Well, except for the fact that he became leader, was the catalyst for the largest influx of new grass roots members to join Labour in THEIR HISTORY, and voted against the party whip for decades. He was such a non-presence that during the election the Establishment had to 1) draft in the army to make threatening noises about him getting elected 2) get the Intelligence Services to "have a quiet word with him" 3) Spin over a 1000 lies during that election, including involving the Israel lobby- basically foreign interference because it was all about Palestine and NATO. 4) get Labour Central office to conspire to rob the working people and all of those new members of their voices. He was such a non-entity that THEY SHIT THEMSELVES. Why? Because all of those years he was supposedly 'disappearing', he was proving himself to be the threat of someone WHO WOULD ACTUALLY DO WHAT HE PROMISED TO DO IF HE GOT IN, UNLIKE KINNOCK. All of that is proof that Corbyn's career and legacy was way more formidable than Kinnock's would ever be..E_V_E_R. They're still trying to destroy him now- financially. If they do that to someone you can guarantee that it isn't because they don't matter. Precisely the opposite. Corbyn had a purpose. Part of it was to finally turn over the stone under which they all hid and shine a light on the TRUE NATURE of the Establishment and the lengths it was prepared to go to, to enslave and steal everything the workers of the country had built. No one after Corbyn and 2019 and what came out afterwards about Labour Central office, could have A SHADOW OF A DOUBT THAT THE ESTABLISHMENT WERE THE ENEMY AND THE LABOUR PARTY WAS PART OF IT. Because Corbyn had an unimpeachable record- they had no reason to hate him, other than the FEAR he would do what he said he was going to do in his manifesto. He was going to take back by government force what they had stolen from the public.

    • @baloodarling486
      @baloodarling486 Год назад +12

      That was longer than one of Corbyn's interview responses.

    • @user-sf7kl9uh7k
      @user-sf7kl9uh7k Год назад +16

      Corbyn nearly destroyed the Labour Party.

    • @billdoor3140
      @billdoor3140 Год назад +13

      You forgot the bit where comrade corbyn decimated the labour party

    • @billdoor3140
      @billdoor3140 Год назад +7

      @@user-sf7kl9uh7k these people are demented mate.

    • @billdoor3140
      @billdoor3140 Год назад +5

      @baloodarling486 those corbyn responses were something else. Reporter- "do you renounce anti semitsm"
      Corbyn "Islamophia is a terrible thing in uk my good friends from HAMAS are here today. I've just gotta make sure my shadow home secretary Diane hasn't got two left shoes on before we meet them"

  • @nathanroche7908
    @nathanroche7908 Год назад +64

    Completely inaccurate. Corbyn shows up in a book on the War in Grenada in 1983 asking a question in parliament. So clearly he did pose memorable questions

    • @georgebisacre9413
      @georgebisacre9413 Год назад +4

      To me Corbyn is an honest and intelligent man I just don’t agree with his conclusions!

    • @petergaskin1811
      @petergaskin1811 Год назад +5

      No, he put A question. The fact that the only reference to it is in a book shows that it was hardly memeorable.

    • @farukissa642
      @farukissa642 Год назад

      ​@@petergaskin1811 proof of censorship from the media. It was a very memorable and historic question

    • @sarcasticstartrek7719
      @sarcasticstartrek7719 9 месяцев назад +3

      @@petergaskin1811 I think they're being sarcastic

    • @oneoflokis
      @oneoflokis 9 месяцев назад

      💯👍

  • @avs4365
    @avs4365 11 месяцев назад +13

    One of the main positions Benn & Corbyn took was who controlled and gained from the discovery and exploitation of our national north sea oil fields. Whether to go to the IMF as demanded by Healy & Kinnock and beg for money that if not requested would not have seen the dereliction of supporting public service workers under the strict spending rules imposed by the IMF and ensured money borrowed, could be paid back rather than being in the pockets of the massive oil companies, and would have been state owned earning enough to balance the books, as in Norway who now has one of the best standard of living in the world.
    Where was Kinnock's voice over the privatisation of our national assets such as rail, electricity, water, bus services and our NHS? No where to be heard other than earning £300 a day to turn up (or not) in the House of Lords (which Benn fought a long and costly battle in the 60's to stay out of) and a cushy number in Europe. As was I, he was a member of the TGWU and totally disappeared (other than to ponce a chauffer driven car during his last failed electoral attempt) to defend the wages and conditions of the London Bus Workers who wages were cut, hours lengthened and pensions worsened by privatisation, while making millionaires of owners like Stagecoach and the other private companies in the London area.

    • @Raukura42
      @Raukura42 4 месяца назад

      If you look on RUclips you’ll see kinnock making speeches about renationalising industries privatised by the Tories. They’re there if you want to find them. JS.

    • @bettyjones2614
      @bettyjones2614 2 месяца назад

      ​@@Raukura42Ben and Corbyn were against privatisation from the start whereas Kinock talks the socialist so much so he was perceived to be a left winger within the party when elected leader 😅

    • @Raukura42
      @Raukura42 2 месяца назад

      @@bettyjones2614accepted. But it’s incorrect to say he didn’t support renationalising; he certainly did so while leader from 1983 to 1992.

  • @AbandonEarth911
    @AbandonEarth911 10 месяцев назад +19

    Now sat in the House of Lords and Frauds.

  • @tomfreemanorourke1519
    @tomfreemanorourke1519 11 месяцев назад +8

    Mr Kinnock should have stayed on the beach where he stumbled

  • @jaimaraj4059
    @jaimaraj4059 Год назад +146

    Why are they still going on about Jeremy Corbyn. A most honest MP

    • @jocosson8892
      @jocosson8892 Год назад

      This is all cover for the purge of the left and the authoritarian right wing turn that Labour has taken under Sir Snake Starmer.

    • @jaimaraj4059
      @jaimaraj4059 Год назад +16

      @SQUINTING SQUIRREL what do you think he discussed with Hamas? Same as Blair & IRA; US & Taliban etc

    • @jeremymanson1781
      @jeremymanson1781 Год назад +8

      Honest? Useless for sure.

    • @billdoor3140
      @billdoor3140 Год назад +7

      Yep his honesty decimated labour and put tories in power.

    • @Straightedgefish
      @Straightedgefish 11 месяцев назад

      @@billdoor3140No, that was the people who voted the Tories. Let’s be transparent here, the only reason Labour has a chance of winning is because they are essentially a Tory red. If you and others were so desperate to get the Tories out, people should of voted them out in 2019 and we would of not had the chaos the country has been going through since 2016
      There’s a saying “If it walks like a duck, talks like a duck, it probably is a duck” that’s what this Labour Party is under Keir Starmer is masquerading as a left wing party that knowingly has Tory policies and has zero intention to reverse what they put in.

  • @davidnichol6282
    @davidnichol6282 11 месяцев назад +41

    Why is Kinnock's voice still relevant he has achieved his purpose he is a wealthy man now.

    • @user-sf7kl9uh7k
      @user-sf7kl9uh7k 9 месяцев назад +7

      They're all wealthy, even Clown Corbyn 🤡

    • @uingaeoc3905
      @uingaeoc3905 9 месяцев назад

      The fanatical pro-EU organisations will dig up dead bodies if it promotes their cause.

    • @AbandonEarth911
      @AbandonEarth911 9 месяцев назад

      Lord Kinnock is a anti socialist anti working class bootlicking parasite.

  • @mickc6700
    @mickc6700 Год назад +98

    Kinnock was *the* most useless, spineless Labour leader in my lifetime. Betrayed the Miners, and later on the Poll Tax, then got mesmerised by Thatcher/Reagonomics. Smith was way better, but sadly died.

    • @Brix96
      @Brix96 11 месяцев назад +8

      I totally agree i remember listening to kinnock speaking in london i said at the time i would`nt trust him as far as i could throw him.

    • @robertdavidson8028
      @robertdavidson8028 11 месяцев назад

      Very sadly - in fact tragic, as it resulted in Bliar's premiership , an illegal war and the magnification of damage to the NHS, started under J. Major

    • @davidharris4062
      @davidharris4062 11 месяцев назад +5

      A traitor to his class

    • @jimbobjimjim6500
      @jimbobjimjim6500 11 месяцев назад +3

      "We,
      're alright!".

    • @denzel270
      @denzel270 11 месяцев назад +5

      Joined the EU gravy train as well.

  • @blue47er
    @blue47er Год назад +123

    Neil Kinnock speaks scornfully about Jeremy Corbyn, but then there are those who believe Kinnock was far less a socialist than he ever pretended to be. His seamless passage from labour leader to an EU Commissioner's job saw him shamelessly enrich himself, while his record as a commissioner was clouded in doubt. He never truly supported the workers, and indeed, criticised striking miners and other active socialist folk in his party in the 1980s, clearly demonstrating his lack of empathy with people who had been duped into voting him into office. Now he has the effrontery to give us his nonsensical, smearing twaddle about Jeremy Corbyn', a man who has consistently been a true socialist and staunch supporter of workers' rights, demonstrating time and time again his solidarity with them. Had Corbyn somehow been elected as PM in 2019, this country would have seen the rich and powerful brought to heel, and taxed till their pips squeaked. The Tories have now had thirteen unbroken years of enriching their friends in the city and business who have enriched themselves and impoverished ordinary people. And sadly, when Starmer takes office, there will be no change.....

    • @thomasmoore1499
      @thomasmoore1499 Год назад +14

      Completely wrong on just about every point. Corbyn led the party to it's biggest defeat since the 30's, that was his final contribution to the socialist cause, having wasted his previous time in parliament not by creating anything new and worthwhile but by constantly taking the role of a grumpy old man, not a role model that anyone other than him would want to adopt. Enough of this nonsense, " Had Corbyn SOMEHOW been elected as PM in 2019 " followed by a flight of fancy entirely of your own creation. Somehow, somewhere, what on earth does any of that mean ? Clearly you will not be voting for Starmer, but the difference between him and Corbyn is that he knows that without winning elections you will never be able to change anything.

    • @iangascoigne8231
      @iangascoigne8231 Год назад +11

      @@thomasmoore1499 They would rather lose than have someone who could win if the leader fails their purity test.

    • @anthonyryan9706
      @anthonyryan9706 Год назад

      Thomas Moore you are completely wrong...corbyn was our last chance of socialism...now we will never see it 😢
      Starmer will take his orders directly from the tories and put the boot into the workers

    • @annenunney9907
      @annenunney9907 Год назад +7

      @@thomasmoore1499 God you are a know all aren’t you

    • @annenunney9907
      @annenunney9907 Год назад +2

      @@iangascoigne8231 well said mate

  • @sbor2020
    @sbor2020 Год назад +67

    Such utter disdain Kinnock has for Corbyn. Kinnock has shown very little integrity and finds himself on the wrong side of history. Kinnock voted for the Gulf War in January 1991, as did Blair, Brown, John Smith, and Harriet Harman. There were notables that voted against the war on grounds of _principles_ . These include Corbyn, Diane Abbott, Tony Benn, Dalyell, Skinner, Primarolo, and others. Maybe had Kinnock shown more courage, and backbone he would have a better political legacy than the enduring "alright!!! alright!!! alright!!!" GE "winner's party" nonsense in Sheffield in 1992.

    • @col.hertford9855
      @col.hertford9855 Год назад +11

      The 1991 was a popular war to remove an invader from an ally. There was massive support in the UK for it.

    • @sbor2020
      @sbor2020 Год назад

      @@col.hertford9855 So an 80 percent approval rating to slaughter Iraqi men, women, and children justifies war? You clearly have no _principles_ of justice and humanity.

    • @user-sf7kl9uh7k
      @user-sf7kl9uh7k Год назад

      Corbyn delivered the worst result for Labour in 135 years. The media hammered Kinnock far harder than Clown Corbyn.

    • @billdoor3140
      @billdoor3140 Год назад

      Corbyn destroyed the labour party, and the 1st Gulf War was stopped. A madman who was using chemical weapons on civilians yoy uneducated melt

    • @the1andonlytitch
      @the1andonlytitch 11 месяцев назад +4

      I just find the hypocrisy of it all very frustrating. Neil Kinnock and his ilk only listen to a tiny handful of people, it's why they keep getting surprised by their defeats. Pretty much anyone could have seen a Corbyn moment coming because of the disdain that had grown towards the Labour Party except the Kinnocks and the Labour right who continued to believe they just needed to be more like the Tories to win. Even now they are not listening to the public favouring the opinions of guests at Murdoch's parties

  • @stevenlynas8930
    @stevenlynas8930 11 месяцев назад +14

    Kinnock and his misses spent years accumulating an estimated 5 million as European commisioners!

  • @gwedielwch
    @gwedielwch Год назад +40

    This is a sad performance by Lord Kinnock. Some of these interminable sentences appear to have no meaning at all. As Leader of the Labour Party Lord Kinnock himself failed to win a General Election. 2017, with Corbyn as Leader, was a far better performance. Lord Kinnock should take a lesson in loyalty from John Prescott. Prescott did an amazing amount of work to support the Party in 2017 - he was the warm up speaker at a number of the main public meetings. He defended the Party and its Leader in many television interviews. If people like Lord Kinnock had shown the same amount of loyalty history could have been very different.

    • @marty8535
      @marty8535 9 месяцев назад +3

      Kinnock a waste of time, as is his MP son.

    • @oneoflokis
      @oneoflokis 9 месяцев назад

      💯👍

  • @JohninRosc
    @JohninRosc 8 месяцев назад +14

    I attended a rally in 1982 outside County Hall in London organised by Ken Livingstone. It was to commemorate the first anniversary of the death of Bobby Sands MP. A Labour councillor from Islington was on the platform that day and made a speech. In it, he beseeched the IRA to lay down their arms and to follow a democratic road wherever it may lead. It was Jeremy Corbyn. He was derided and abused for his speech that day (in spite of needing Irish votes the following year in his first general election). Owen Carron, Bobby Sands' election agent and successor as MP for Fermanagh and South Tyrone was the main speaker that day and as you may imagine, many IRA members were present and laying down arms was not on their agenda then. It took another 12 years before JC's rationale was listened to, and peace broke out in the north of Ireland - long before Mo Mowlem (God rest her) was even heard of. For his trouble, Jeremy was labelled a terrorist and a traitor. History will judge him correctly - as it will Kinnock, Blair, Cameron, Thatcher etc.

  • @odinallfarther6038
    @odinallfarther6038 11 месяцев назад +12

    Ah so the wind bag is still blowing the old winds .

  • @jam-nc8ut
    @jam-nc8ut 9 месяцев назад +19

    And yet he inspired a huge interest in politics amongst young people and people alienated by centrist politics, and the biggest surge in membership of a political party in UK history.

    • @neilhardman7973
      @neilhardman7973 6 месяцев назад +2

      If you have 90% possession and 4x the chances as the other team, in a football game, but you still lose 3-0, you've still lost. I find it hard to argue the increase in stats you mentioned was his primary job as labour leader, it is to win elections and get labour policy implemented. In this he failed. One could argue that the same people who were enthused about politics in 2017, were disaffected by the result in 2019, so even based on the metrics you mentioned, he his success wasn't very long-term.

    • @stephenholmes1036
      @stephenholmes1036 6 месяцев назад +5

      Unfortunately, For Corbyn couldn't carry the working class.

    • @pimmagrimm
      @pimmagrimm 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@neilhardman7973the game was already rigged against him. He wasn't supposed to be there and the globalist machine went into overdrive to hamper him and get him out. The fact he did so well at the first election was simply incredible given these circumstances.

  • @yetidodger6650
    @yetidodger6650 Год назад +8

    Kinnock sold out and joined the EU gravy train.

    • @rolandscales9380
      @rolandscales9380 11 месяцев назад +1

      I'd heard the term "EU gravy train" many years ago, but I'm still not sure what it's meant to be.

  • @TC8787-yq7og
    @TC8787-yq7og 7 месяцев назад +5

    In the related videos, there's a video of Corbyn debating the Oxford student union about how socialism does work. Kinnock isn't very sharp is he?

    •  День назад

      debating with Socialists because that what the vast majority of the audience were at Oxford that time.

  • @chrishughes62able
    @chrishughes62able Год назад +40

    Dwi wir yn caru fy ngwlad, Cymru, ond mae gen i gywilydd llwyr o'r bradwr gyrfa Kinnock a'i fab Torïaidd Coch!
    I truly love my country, Wales, but I am totally ashamed of the careerist traitor Kinnock and his Red Tory son!

    • @gwedielwch
      @gwedielwch Год назад +6

      'Rwy'n llwyr cytuno. I completely agree.

    • @howardchambers9679
      @howardchambers9679 11 месяцев назад +1

      The Cymru for Tory and the colour red is a match made in heaven. Assuming they speak English there. And have Google translate lol

  •  11 месяцев назад +9

    Corbyn never fell over.

  • @austenj4539
    @austenj4539 Год назад +28

    Vacuous and self serving - Neil Kinnock

    • @user-sf7kl9uh7k
      @user-sf7kl9uh7k Год назад +3

      How's your Momentum membership going, still singing that 'awesome' Jeremy Corbyn song?

    • @michaelharrison3602
      @michaelharrison3602 11 месяцев назад

      Sounds like every MP
      in the house

    • @scooby1992
      @scooby1992 9 месяцев назад

      He paved the way for making Labour electable again . He wasnt perfect and overestimated that he might win in 1992 .

  • @trueredred859
    @trueredred859 6 месяцев назад +4

    Corbyn rent free in kinnocks head

  • @michaelharrison3602
    @michaelharrison3602 11 месяцев назад +4

    All career politicians concerned with lining their own pockets. Labour, Tory, Lib dem independent it's a nice little earner nothing else

    • @scooby1992
      @scooby1992 9 месяцев назад +1

      Not necessarily . Jeremy Corbyn is a career politician ( in parliament since 1983 and a councillor before that ) , I dont think he is in it to line his own pockets .

  • @jamesbrickley778
    @jamesbrickley778 Год назад +39

    Jeremy Corbyn is 100 times the man Kinnock is.

    • @user-sf7kl9uh7k
      @user-sf7kl9uh7k Год назад +3

      He's even better at loosing elections.

    • @DMG0011
      @DMG0011 11 месяцев назад +1

      That's probably why he can't win an election 😅😅😅

    • @eightiesmusic1984
      @eightiesmusic1984 8 месяцев назад

      @@user-sf7kl9uh7k Loosing?

    • @tybulustyburn5580
      @tybulustyburn5580 6 месяцев назад

      not particularly funny considering the bunch of turds we have running the country into the ground, Broke Britain is the polite version
      @@DMG0011

    • @kevanbodsworth9868
      @kevanbodsworth9868 6 месяцев назад

      @@user-sf7kl9uh7k Block head voters who get told what they should vote by billionaire tax avoiders. Dumb is not strong enough, And win? If you win for nothing what does that mean,

  • @robs4006
    @robs4006 10 месяцев назад +5

    Lord Windbag, achieved nothing as Labour leader. Stabbed miners and Liverpool Councillors in the back

    • @Donnerbalken28
      @Donnerbalken28 10 месяцев назад +1

      Scargill was the guy who betrayed the Miners, not Kinnock. Scargill had Thatcher where he wanted her and then decided he could get even more. But he didn't and everyone paid the price for that.

    • @robs4006
      @robs4006 9 месяцев назад +2

      @Donnerbalken28 I don't recall Arthur taking a knighthood - that's the reward of class traitors

    • @Donnerbalken28
      @Donnerbalken28 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@robs4006 He's still living in a generous mansion in Norfolk, while the people who supported him only got scraps.

    • @scooby1992
      @scooby1992 9 месяцев назад

      To be fair a party leader couldnt condone law breaking and that is what the councillors would have been doing . They nearly bankrupted the city and I say that as someone who totally accepts it was the fault of the Tory Gvt underfunding councils as they still do today .

    • @robs4006
      @robs4006 9 месяцев назад

      @scooby1992 what law breaking would that be ... his words at the time were 'a Labour Council, Labour Council, scurrying around issuing redundancy notices'
      He got his title for selling out the working class. Lord Windbag is all he will be remembered by

  • @nealmctaggart7229
    @nealmctaggart7229 10 месяцев назад +3

    Kinnock was Thatchers and Blair’s blag carrier. His son is Bag Carrier junior.

  • @monkeytrousers6180
    @monkeytrousers6180 11 месяцев назад +9

    "Elections are decided by the intelligence agencies" - Paul Mason

    • @sprobablycancr4457
      @sprobablycancr4457 9 месяцев назад +4

      He couldn't beat them so he joined them (Paul Mason).

    • @Tommii38
      @Tommii38 9 месяцев назад +2

      How ironic then that Mason now works for the intelligence services.

  • @jamesemery3399
    @jamesemery3399 10 месяцев назад +3

    The central argument of the Labour right against the Labour left is that the latter will never get the spread of electoral support that is needed to get to power. That may be right. But that necessarily means we will have to expect any future Labour government will at best make small, tangible, incremental changes to improve some people’s lives, but will fundamentally be unable and unwilling to address growing inequality, systemic racism, climate collapse and the concentration of political, economic and cultural power in the hands of a few people and corporations. Many on the hard right of the party are ok with that, because they don’t seek to transform society anyway. But many, like Kinnock, see it as in part regrettable but a necessary compromise you have to make.
    If you’re on the left, I think your best bet is to get involved in campaigns on specific policy issues as these can have their successes.
    Electorally, the left, which does represent a significant though minority strain of opinion in this country, can only make headway with a reform of the way we vote.

    • @scooby1992
      @scooby1992 9 месяцев назад +2

      All true . Getting away from FPTP is essential to make all votes count .

    • @oneoflokis
      @oneoflokis 9 месяцев назад

      #PRNow

  • @johnturnef133
    @johnturnef133 7 месяцев назад +1

    The problem with Neil is he spoke and still is, forty years later, to people who never agreed with him, hence the the term, Welsh Wind Bag.

  • @Bungleandgeorge808
    @Bungleandgeorge808 11 месяцев назад +12

    Isn't Kinnock the man who sold out the miners back in the 80s

    • @AbandonEarth911
      @AbandonEarth911 10 месяцев назад +1

      Yes Kinnock has spent a lot more than 33 years betraying the working class, now Baron Windbag sat in the House of Lords and Frauds

    • @Donnerbalken28
      @Donnerbalken28 10 месяцев назад +2

      No, that was Scargill.

    • @scooby1992
      @scooby1992 9 месяцев назад

      No , it was Thatcher that defeated them and Scargill who wouldnt hold a ballot .

    • @George57
      @George57 9 месяцев назад

      Sold out the minors and the people of wales.

    • @AbandonEarth911
      @AbandonEarth911 9 месяцев назад

      If they had held a ballot the majority would have supported the defence of their industry.@@scooby1992

  • @zog97xy
    @zog97xy Год назад +9

    Kinnock never got anywhere.

  • @kjones6941
    @kjones6941 11 месяцев назад +4

    this guy made very good speeches but had no substance to anything he ever said.

    • @AbandonEarth911
      @AbandonEarth911 9 месяцев назад

      Lord Kinnock bootlicking Parasite.

  • @bearsbreeches
    @bearsbreeches 11 месяцев назад +4

    Kinnock, just another failed labour leader. Sounds like sour grapes

  • @djpokeeffe8019
    @djpokeeffe8019 Год назад +30

    Kinnock ensured we got the wrong Milliband, hence Cameron, Brexit and Johnson. Not a great CV.😢

    • @commonsense9176
      @commonsense9176 Год назад +5

      Plus worst of all Thacher

    • @billdoor3140
      @billdoor3140 Год назад

      Brexit was a result of labour not listening to working class people on mass immigration and their obsession with cheap underpaid Eastern European workers and branding those who said they wanted less as "ist" or "phobes"

    • @user-sf7kl9uh7k
      @user-sf7kl9uh7k 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@commonsense9176Don't forget Clown Corbyn 🤡

    • @commonsense9176
      @commonsense9176 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@user-sf7kl9uh7k the one these people stopped becoming the best pm this country would have seen. Or are you happy with the status quo of nothing improving.
      Yes we will never forget ill never vote labour again

    • @user-sf7kl9uh7k
      @user-sf7kl9uh7k 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@commonsense9176 You're entitled to an opinion, and I'm entitled to mine. Yours lost two elections though...

  • @craigadams2961
    @craigadams2961 11 месяцев назад +3

    How’s that boot taste Neil?

  • @Buckydhu
    @Buckydhu Год назад +36

    Funny to see Neil Kinnock still banging on, he was an utter failure as leader of the Labour party and a fairly mediocre MEP who played his part in the BREXIT result. I have no idea why anyone is still interested in what his opinion on anything political. Most people only remember him as the politician that looked foolish as he fell over on the beach.

    • @user-sf7kl9uh7k
      @user-sf7kl9uh7k Год назад

      Sounds like the Jeremy Corbyn autopsy.

    • @Buckydhu
      @Buckydhu Год назад

      ruclips.net/video/_iYm-wnIMHo/видео.html

    • @AbandonEarth911
      @AbandonEarth911 10 месяцев назад +2

      Yes but baron Windbag Kinnock has made a lot of money along the way, and has spent many more than 33 years betraying the working class.

  • @martycrow
    @martycrow Год назад +2

    Would be good to see the full interview.

  • @duncanpoundcake
    @duncanpoundcake 5 месяцев назад +3

    Kinnock, three times failure, lecturing us on not winning.

  • @virgilrytaar9083
    @virgilrytaar9083 11 месяцев назад +9

    Kinnock, utterly useless. Now he's a lord

  • @GraemeWight-wx3xz
    @GraemeWight-wx3xz 6 месяцев назад +2

    WE LIKE CORBYN MORE THAN YOU NEIL.

  • @roineval
    @roineval 4 месяца назад

    Is this the guy that got a standing ovation at Derry town hall a year ago or so ? or was it another ex-leader of the Labour party?

  • @julianshepherd2038
    @julianshepherd2038 Год назад +41

    Kinnock was such a bad leader, terrible at pmqs, rambling speeches of style over content and then "we're alright" where one man managed to blow an election.
    Hes been rebranded as a great elder statesman but he was an abject failure.

    • @danielwebb8402
      @danielwebb8402 Год назад

      2 general election losses is an abject failure. Completely agree.

    • @gilgamecha
      @gilgamecha Год назад +16

      He and John Smith saved the party from oblivion and turned it into a high functioning machine. Handed that machine to Blair and with some movie star good looks and no whiff of the old left about him won a landslide. 😮

    • @jocosson8892
      @jocosson8892 Год назад

      @@gilgamecha Which they used to murder 200,000 Iraqis and Afghanis for NO REASON but OIL that they got for BUSH and continued Thatchers NEOLIBERALISM and took the RIGHT TO HEALTHCARE from the BRITISH people and continued the PRIVATISATION of the NHS.
      So if you want to take credit for Blair; take credit for that and the MASSIVE BANKSTER BAILOUT and DECADES of counterproductive and class war AUSTERITY and PISS ON THE WORKERS psudonomics!

    • @markbebber2284
      @markbebber2284 Год назад

      ⁠​⁠@@gilgamecha And with that landslide Blair gave us buy to let schemes instead of Council housing PPI that we are paying for ever and subsidies to employers through tax credits not to mention hundreds of thousands dead because of him. Blair was Thatcher’s greatest achievement in her own words. The man was pure scum and we’re living with the consequences.

    • @ogribiker8535
      @ogribiker8535 Год назад +3

      So you can troll more than just 'A different bias', must be really pushing your abilities !!!!!

  • @skymaster4743
    @skymaster4743 6 месяцев назад +1

    The British establishment represented by Conservatives and New Labour did not want Corbyn in power. Neil Kinnock represents the same old vestiges of establishment politics that played out in the 1990s.

  • @TomHutchinson5
    @TomHutchinson5 9 месяцев назад +2

    Shameful

  • @owlsrace
    @owlsrace 11 месяцев назад +13

    He claimed Corbyn spent 33 years talking to people who already agreed with him. But Kinnock has spent over 40 years cursing people who never agreed with him.

    • @AbandonEarth911
      @AbandonEarth911 10 месяцев назад

      Baron Neil Windbag Kinnock now sat in the House of Frauds. This guy spent a lifetime betraying the working class.

  • @archvaldor
    @archvaldor 9 месяцев назад +4

    As I recall Kinnock spent all his time talking to the tory press...who hated him regardless of what he said. Meanwhile he lost the support of many on the left who saw him as a sellout.

  • @Titus9508
    @Titus9508 5 месяцев назад +1

    Which is, of course, utter rubbish.
    Jeremy spent 33 years supporting the Labour Party's simple founding principles against people like Kinnock, Blair etc. who wanted smaller public services and far more privatisation.

  • @kevinjackson292
    @kevinjackson292 4 месяца назад +2

    Hasn't history proved Jeremy Corbyn right?

  • @iancutler1994
    @iancutler1994 5 месяцев назад

    Well done x

  • @annenunney9907
    @annenunney9907 Год назад +23

    This man is a joke he lost two elections and what has he done since sod all Jeremy did a much better job he knew what needed to be done in this country to make things fairer but of cause people like kinnock did not want to make things fairer that is why we are in the state we are in and unfortunately we now have to conservative parties and let’s face it kinnock does not look as if he is going short of grub I have voted Labour since I was 18 I could never vote for starmer or mandleson I am not sure which one is the leader

    • @thomasmoore1499
      @thomasmoore1499 Год назад +4

      You are very confused it would seem. Having voted Labour for so many years you end up not liking ( and the quite sneering reference to Kinnock and grub ?) any of them, other than Corbyn. Really , just how does that work ? Corbyn lost badly in 2019 in fact much worse than any Labour leader since the 1930's, do you want to keep on repeating that ?

    • @therichieboy
      @therichieboy Год назад +3

      You sound like you're still 18!

    • @annenunney9907
      @annenunney9907 Год назад +3

      @@thomasmoore1499 we all know why he lost badly dont we

    • @annenunney9907
      @annenunney9907 Год назад

      @@therichieboy I still look it to

    • @petergaskin1811
      @petergaskin1811 Год назад +1

      And did he win an election? Remind me.

  • @roddychristodoulou9111
    @roddychristodoulou9111 Год назад +2

    As far as I can remember kinnock was a bit of a leftie also .
    So what he was trying to tell us in this video is only a new labour type of Labour Party will ever be allowed by the establishment to take power .

    • @scooby1992
      @scooby1992 9 месяцев назад

      Sadly he is probably right . The media , much of it owned by people who dont live here are pro right wing Gvts .

  • @user-hu1yi8ox9z
    @user-hu1yi8ox9z 5 месяцев назад

    I'm definitely not a fan of Thatcher, but let's not exacdurate. The fall in manufacturing under thatcher was 15%, and the loss of manufacturing declined even further under new Labour.

  • @mizzyroro
    @mizzyroro 6 месяцев назад

    I never knew what a Welsh accent sounded like until I watched the documentary on the speaker of the House of Commons which featured George Thomas. Now I can easily spot a Welsh accent and Neil has it.

  • @patcampton7163
    @patcampton7163 11 месяцев назад +3

    Excuses excuses, kinnock. Your son was very shocked by the results in 2017. Actually your opinion is no longer relevant and you didnt win either.

  • @tallyNUMbers314
    @tallyNUMbers314 10 месяцев назад +7

    A bit rich for a hypocrite who took a lordship and was defeated himself in a GE as leader of Labour....I know why these types people constantly get a platform though

  • @dermotdonnelly5495
    @dermotdonnelly5495 Месяц назад +1

    KInnock, what a waste of space. He couldn't even support the miners' strike!

  • @brettsavage1816
    @brettsavage1816 5 месяцев назад

    Good to see that Kinnock's other political calculations were so successful for him to make these comments.

  • @anyatranter5588
    @anyatranter5588 19 дней назад

    What the hell is the weight of a man who never made prime minister either.

  • @bobjones-ey5gl
    @bobjones-ey5gl 10 месяцев назад

    Neil Kinnock has been on the RUclips Television a lot recently, he likes to speak his opinion on Jermey Corbyn and sometimes also Blair.

  • @tweakerman
    @tweakerman 4 месяца назад

    Great man!!!

  • @musopaul5407
    @musopaul5407 20 дней назад

    LORD Kinnock; a true Man of the People!

  • @redmed10
    @redmed10 6 месяцев назад +1

    Corbyn was a cypher. Even now I've hardly heard him talk. He got himself embroiled in accusations of anti semitism and all he had to say was that criticism of Israel government does not mean you are against jewish people.

    • @BionicRasta
      @BionicRasta 4 месяца назад

      Corbyn got himself embroiled in anti semitism because of his hardline support for the Palestinian cause & those groups of supporters who he aligned with within that, some of whom are anti semitic. Rather than denounce them he looked to pacify them by referring to Hamas & Hezbollah as 'friends', whilst being unwilling to do the same with the jews. His bias towards Islam over the Jew was clear. This is why whenever he was asked to denounce anti semitism he would bring up islamphobia & racism in general to avoid answering the question directly. This made him appear anti semitic. The same principle with his republican belief & the IRA made him look unpatriotic & anti British.

  • @yass1068
    @yass1068 3 месяца назад

    Not true , i did not even know or heard of Jeremy Corbyn few years back , now i know him and support him ,

  • @markwatkins8309
    @markwatkins8309 6 месяцев назад +1

    I don't think Kinnock betrayed his principles. He was / is a realist. He realised the way to get Labour into power was to widen out and go more mainstream. Blair then took that on further and got into No.10. In '83, it was a missed opportunity not to have Kinnock, Hattersley, Cunningham, Gould etc in power - a real cabinet of talents who largely were in it for The People. New Labour in it for themselves, Blair, Campbell, Mandelson = Millennium Domes to dropping bombs.

    • @duncanpoundcake
      @duncanpoundcake 5 месяцев назад

      Yep. Add another failed election to his record 😅

    • @JamJam0189
      @JamJam0189 4 месяца назад

      Indeed & let's be honest the main reason the Tories won in 2019 was because of Brexit, 'Get Brexit Done', whilst Labour's Brexit strategy was more complex yet Keir Starmer the then Brexit secretary seemed to like it. This allowed a moderate vote share increase overall and crucially extra seats gained in Northern areas that were usually Labour seats, in 2017 Labour's vote share actually increased by a higher percentage than in 1997 and it cost Theresa May's government their overall majority so they had to do a deal with the DUP. May who was like a weaker Thatcher called the early election to get a bigger majority and actually lost the majority for the party, when you consider that nearly the whole media even the Guardian and the BBC alongside many Labour MP's were actively working against Corbyn and his allies to actually increase vote share was pretty remarkable. The centrist Labour MP's were shocked and the media too, but I saw the huge increase in members and the excitement brought about my a leader of the Labour Party who had real passion for change, change which many wanted particularly young people. Our home town saw thousands turn up to see him speak in 2017 more than other leaders have done and more young people did vote. Miliband and Brown got around 30% of the vote less than Labour got in even in 2019 so worst result since 1935? This is an untrue statement often repeated.

    • @duncanpoundcake
      @duncanpoundcake 4 месяца назад

      @@JamJam0189 Shush with your facts now.

  • @rahuldahoob
    @rahuldahoob 5 месяцев назад +2

    WHAT A DULLARD 😅

  • @thecrankster
    @thecrankster Год назад +12

    Really interesting to hear his view on Momentum. Not Militants but misty-eyed idealists

    • @jocosson8892
      @jocosson8892 Год назад +5

      So because they aren't bombing banks they are criticised for being "idealists"

    • @AndyTomlins
      @AndyTomlins Год назад +10

      Considering we have a Labour Party trying to be more anti-immigration than the Tories and have dropped every single policy that might have benefitted the younger generation they seem to have been proven correct.

    • @danielwebb8402
      @danielwebb8402 Год назад +4

      He meant militants as in 80s Liverpool Council etc. You know who's official moto was "better to break the law".
      Their actual own name was Militant.

    • @californiadreamin8423
      @californiadreamin8423 Год назад

      @@AndyTomlins Twaddle. Was Corbyn pushed to the fore by young people ? Yes. Did Corbyn impose à 3 Line whip to support a minority Tory government get Article 50 through parliament ? That was betrayal of those young people, and a betrayal of party policy and working people. Think 20% food inflation, the housing mortgage crisis, and blue passports. Give your brain a chance.

    • @danielwebb8402
      @danielwebb8402 Год назад +1

      ​@@AndyTomlins
      You missed
      That look like may win an election. You know, the point of politics.

  • @robertbell9935
    @robertbell9935 4 месяца назад

    "For those who say that this is a necessary and just conflict because it will bring about peace and security: September the 11th was a dreadful event. 8000 deaths in Afghanistan brought back none of those who died in the World Trade Centre. Thousands more deaths in Iraq will not make things right. It will set off a spiral of conflict, of hate, of misery, of desperation, that will fuel the wars, the conflict, the terrorism, the depression, and the misery of future generations." - Jeremy Corbyn, Stop The Iraq War March, 15th February 2003.
    What were you saying at that time, Neil?

  • @amirishelston5212
    @amirishelston5212 23 дня назад

    Ah yes Neil Kinnock, still holding the record for the Labour leader who stayed further away from office than anybody before or since.

  • @merked1980
    @merked1980 11 месяцев назад +3

    the good die young. Kinnock will be around for another couple of decades..

  • @sheikhobarey780
    @sheikhobarey780 3 месяца назад

    kinnock speaking for tory

  • @23715
    @23715 5 месяцев назад +1

    Corbyn couldn't lead the working class out of a paperbag.

    • @neillynch_ecocidologist
      @neillynch_ecocidologist 5 месяцев назад

      It's more about encouraging fools not to believe everything the right wing media tell them. To get them to vote in their own interests and not those of billionaires. Are you a billionaire or just a clueless imbecile?

  • @robred19
    @robred19 4 месяца назад

    Kinnock made 2 powerful speeches in his life, the first where he castigated the Militant Tendency at Conference - A speech, although powerful, was something I disagreed with. Unleashing a witch-hunt was both counter-productive and self-defeating. The second, was his acceptance of defeat in 1992 on the steps of Walworth Road, where he warned us all not to get old. How prophetic that all was. Yet he never reflects on both. As nothing scares the shit out of Tories more than organised Marxists, but he de-fanged the Labour movement of its advanced Cadres in which the Tories got attack our services, impose their illogical doctrine that has led to the calamity that we have today.
    Kinnock has a partial responsibility in all of this. When Labour needed unity, at a crucial period in UK political history, he effectively sabotaged that and now, as a result with numerous crisis that afflicts these sorry Isles, we now have children starving to death by the side of their dead father's. That is where we are at.
    And then he wonders why Corbyn, enjoyed such support?

  • @yourgirlme9163
    @yourgirlme9163 11 месяцев назад +2

    Kinnock the inept waxing lyrical about nothing

  • @deirdreruane8104
    @deirdreruane8104 3 месяца назад

    When the above has to spend an interview castigating another...a wise man once said: What Peter says about Paul.says more about Peter than it does about Paul.enuf said..

  • @tedldoo6935
    @tedldoo6935 3 месяца назад

    Kinnock is part of the establishment, he was never going to support him.
    He says he spoke to those who agreed with him yet he inspired many to become engaged which resulted in the largest political party in Europe.
    Kinnock was key in the party shifting right.

  • @janjantimalsina1465
    @janjantimalsina1465 10 месяцев назад +1

    🖤

  • @jasonmendelli6023
    @jasonmendelli6023 11 месяцев назад +1

    Overwhelmingly slanderous arrogance from a guy who couldn't do the job. Youll never have unity witgout listening to those you want unity with.

  • @tommynocash2419
    @tommynocash2419 Месяц назад +1

    Lord kinnock, what a joke

  • @nicolasplagne5577
    @nicolasplagne5577 4 месяца назад

    If Kinnock comes from Labour's Left ... Words are meaningless

  • @bereal6590
    @bereal6590 4 месяца назад

    Decent bloke, I was gutted when he lost✌

  • @neothegsd7292
    @neothegsd7292 6 месяцев назад +1

    Oh Kinnock...the failed leader who became so establishment that they made him a Lord!

  • @user-qd2hl9lu3h
    @user-qd2hl9lu3h 7 месяцев назад

    I don't think Kinnock should be giving anyone any advice on how to win elections.

    • @storm21410
      @storm21410 7 месяцев назад

      I agree, and neither should Corbyn

  • @gwalia2112
    @gwalia2112 5 месяцев назад +3

    Amazing that this man still has a voice that people want to hear, dreadful politician.

  • @odiferousmusky1299
    @odiferousmusky1299 5 месяцев назад

    You will eat your words, lord kinnock

  • @paulbangash4317
    @paulbangash4317 11 месяцев назад +2

    Kinnochio

  • @wilsonfisk6626
    @wilsonfisk6626 10 месяцев назад +1

    I agree with Kinnock's comparison between Benn and Corbyn. Everything else is b.s..

    • @stuartwray6175
      @stuartwray6175 9 месяцев назад +1

      Benn would undoubtedly have backed Corbyn.

    • @wilsonfisk6626
      @wilsonfisk6626 9 месяцев назад +1

      @stuartwray6175 I know

  • @stuarthardy8202
    @stuarthardy8202 4 месяца назад

    These concerns raises now show why Neil himself was a useless labour leader because he mentions these after the facts! To the wilder pubic Eg to my mind a strong leader faces challenges whilst there's a challenge to face.

  • @mikemines2931
    @mikemines2931 6 месяцев назад

    Spent a lifetime turning into something he hated when younger. The definition of a total hypocrite.

  • @tommynocash2419
    @tommynocash2419 Месяц назад

    Ramsay Mcdonald was less of a traitor than you

  • @robertmaccallum8390
    @robertmaccallum8390 4 месяца назад

    Kinnock nearly destroyed the Labour Party.

  • @potdog1000
    @potdog1000 9 месяцев назад +3

    in my opinion Kinnock got it right

    • @Tommii38
      @Tommii38 9 месяцев назад +1

      How so?

    • @AbandonEarth911
      @AbandonEarth911 9 месяцев назад

      Kinnock this Anti working class bootlicking Parasite now sat in the House of Frauds.

  • @user-sf7kl9uh7k
    @user-sf7kl9uh7k Год назад +2

    We're Alright, we're alright, we're ALRIGHT!!!!!!🎉

  • @user-mo2nw4xu4h
    @user-mo2nw4xu4h 11 месяцев назад +6

    Well, for a man that achieved nothing in 33 years, Corbyn did better in 2017 (40%) after 2 years as leader, than you did in 1987 (30.8%) and 1992 (34.4%) after 9 years. And as for those activists and young people you speak so patronisingly about: they WERE actually out there, talking to people who "didn't agree with them", appealing to a "broader section of the electorate", and building a new coalition to win power. And if they had had your support, rather than your condescension and disdain, they would have done it. And everything after 2017 (the election, Brexit, the cost of living crisis, the NHS mess) would have been a completely different story. Sorry, Neil, but you and the Labour Party Establishment are as much to blame as anyone else for Labour's failure. And the irony is, you are now so deeply entrenched in your denialism, that you sound exactly like the die-hard leftwing ideologues of the 1980s who you have always chastised for not "changing with the times" and blamed for successive Labour defeats. The hypocrisy would be astonishing if it weren't so depressing.

    • @Oscarspoem
      @Oscarspoem 6 месяцев назад

      Worst election result since 1933. You forgot that bit. Haha

    • @user-mo2nw4xu4h
      @user-mo2nw4xu4h 13 дней назад

      @@Oscarspoem Because of the Labour Establishment, and people like Kinnock, Starmer, et al, trying to reverse Brexit. Which pains me to say as a Remainer, but it is the truth.

    • @Oscarspoem
      @Oscarspoem 13 дней назад

      @user-mo2nw4xu4h Corbyn is an odious man. A man who supported the IRA when they were bombing London. I am of Irish descent and it was difficult growing up in London with that going on. Corbyn has also openly called Hamas his friends. A spiteful man who talks mostly utter nonsense. Politics should be about today, not the past, where he lives. More homes, more training, more hope for people who are generally struggling. The left do not represent the working class, they hate the working class. Dividing us up by colour, gender is all they are interested in. Leave us all alone and we would get on just fine. I grew up as a Labour supporter, yet they do not represent me or anyone I know. Corbyn is a deeply hated man. I hope it stays that way. Thanks for the reply. Enjoy your weekend.

  • @CarlosBacardi
    @CarlosBacardi 4 месяца назад

    Kinnock is full of generally unchallenged rubbish, quite opposite from the kind of challenging Corbyn had to deal with. To say that Corbyn only spoke to people who agreed with him is astonishing. Yes he has his loyal backers and peers pursue Parliament, but otherwise he has served as an outsider on the margins of Parliament, literally disagreeing with 90% of his parliamentary peers on the direction of the country for 40 years. How often did Kinnock vote against his party whips, for example? I’m fed up how this bore is treated like an elder grandee by the mainstream political media.