Your Party

  • Your Party have lengths to go to appeal to people

    The Your Party platform is the Death Star of Lefty politics in the UK, a uniting powerhouse of a galaxy of forces and tribes into a single alignment for ultimate domination.

    Of course, the publicity is always a misnomer in these things.

    Jeremy Corbyn MP (Islington North/Your Party) holds onto a seat for the uses of a collective of souls that seek more from a system than a bit of time and attention, here and there.

    This is his junket flying through space and time for a bigger purpose.

    It has lengths to go to reach people that have sober thoughts in mind, more local concerns, and a few complaints themselves. It needs to open up to take in a huddled one or two, trying to think of what to do if everything has failed them too.

  • Corbyn speaks power to truth for the massive

    Jeremy Corbyn MP (Islington North/Your Party) has become the Parliamentary Leader for his own party, Your Party. After a labyrinthine process of selection and election in the new remit ‘Left’ activists have in UK politics, he ascends to the same position he had before. It could never be no other, we hear them say, and it may last for a long time, too, we hear others say.

  • Your Party is dismantling itself

    Your Party is struggling. It’s believed Iqbal Mohamed MP (Dewsbury and Batley/Independent) has left the startup on grounds of internal divisions. He’s said as much via a post on his X profile. It means the party now has a problem with dismantling itself before the public.

    This is ironic, and a humorous turn of fortunes for a party built on the idiosyncratic hopes of a minority. Perhaps he’s saved himself from a sinking ship, or rescued his dignity after a poor cruise. It’s his choice, and he returns unharmed to lone working.

  • Your Party risks cultural wars

    The standpoint of many socialists and Left-leaning ideologues is not akin to the reality. The wealth of the world’s one percent, as they put it, is like saying a manager has too much power. It’s like accusing us all of hoarding food when it’s our dinner time. It’s the same as seeking to fill any car seat regardless of the drivers wishes.

    The great glass ceiling above us, that being wherever wealth is held, is also supported by an alleged twenty percent beneath it. These are the staff that work in industries rich with investment. They are the people tasked with making sure money stays where it’s useful. They also even have to make it profitable.

    The rest – much of the remaining seventy nine percent – are the rest of us who use or rely on money. It’s there that protesters are usually found. It’s their income, their property, or their savings at risk that matters. The call to pull the ceiling down is akin to wishing the sky to fall on our heads. It doesn’t work. It can’t work. It won’t work. It’s why people call for reason – and calm.

  • Do Your Party run the risk of a revolt?

    The Your Party brand has barely launched and already socialist groups are jumping at the opportunity to unite to defeat the country. An X account for it suggests the grassroots movements that populate our streets time after time with hateful slogans should form a super-group to take on the “failed political class”. This is no mere glass of grass juice, it’s the reorganisation of agitators into a much larger force.

    The need to clarify events is pressing now on the fledgling party. This is to reassure the rest of the political class that it doesn’t have designs on power – or our lives. It will take some doing. Most people are aware of the disruptive effects of activism in our towns and cities. They know its roots and its shoots. The need now is to move away from such revolt and turn back to democracy. This is the hope of most of us now.

  • Your Party vs. Citizen ID

    The leaders of Your Party have said they oppose the introduction of “Digital ID” cards as a legal requirement. It’s a policy due to be announced today.

    It’s not gone down well with the liberals in UK politics. It’s the same story. The civil liberties argument rests on an assumption the UK state is overzealous.

    It doesn’t ring true. The events at Dover suggests apathy is a bigger problem. The case is for a new generation of enforcers, and they need the tools to do it with.

  • Chaos reigns in not-yet-Your Party

    Jeremy Corbyn MP (Islington North/Your Party) is no stranger to criticism. His familiarity with controversy has continued in a new party he’s setting up with fellow independent MP’s – principally Zarah Sultana MP (Coventry South/Your Party) – as an electoral force.

    It’s already fracturing as legal threats swirl. The problem is in part a rights issue (not unusual for a socialist crowd) over the new protocols for membership. The reciprocal letters now issued show a determination to establish who says what, how, and why.

    The call in of lawyers is an escalation that isn’t usually predicted for a very new effort in Parliament. It usually comes after a long time and a lot of dispute in between. There again, the Left (its former base of support) is basically a brief history in short thrift.