PT wrote:What has become dead clear is that Jeremy Corbyn is the kind of politician we thought no longer existed. He is led by conviction rather than populism. You can tell the areas where he has had to compromise to accommodate his party (e.g Trident) but he still won't associate his own beliefs with those compromises. Leads to some awkward interview moments but his heart and his convictions are worn very much on his sleeve. On Northern Ireland, his views are pretty well known (I think it was Mcguiness who described him as a "friend of Ireland and a friend of Derry" - I think we know what that friendship means).
Theresa May is far more like the politicians we've become used to since Thatcher went. Pragmatically trying to take a centre ground that will do just about enough to secure a slug of marginals whilst receiving nods of approval from the heartland. And when on occasion that tipping point has been over-reached, having no qualms about back-tracking.
It looked like a no-brainer when she was asking who we'd prefer to negotiate Brexit on our behalf a couple of weeks ago. It looks less so now. "Strong and stable" resonated a couple of weeks ago. It resonates less now.
The good news for our democracy is that it has got interesting. There's a contest and there's a clearer choice than we've had for decades. Good.
On the issue of principles that's all commendable but my dad is principled but he wouldn't make a good minister for state
Strong principles can stand in the way of wrong decisions
Corbyn has voted against every security measure
I want a leader who has principles but who also has the ability to put the principles to one side if it for the good of the country
Corbyn has not demonstrated to me he can do this