-
And as a Corbyn victory would mean waving goodbye to Northern Ireland and (I suspect) Scotland
Oh yes, because Corbyn clearly has the ambition to immediately launch fireworks into the most volatile political situation in Britain and will be convinced that he should immediately change Britain's electoral arithmetic by doing the SNP's bidding and losing any potential for Labour seats in Scotland.
I think Labour is likely to lose those voters it pulled across from Cons/LD's based on Labour defining itself as a hard-Brexit party.
I have yet to see the slightest indication that Labour are less than a million miles away from a 'hard Brexit'.
-
I have yet to see the slightest indication that Labour are less than a million miles away from a 'hard Brexit'
It's in their manifesto: https://labour.org.uk/manifesto/negotiating-brexit/
Corbyn's method of removing the need for a backstop is Irish re-unification, the efficacy of which can't be in doubt, I suspect it'd not go down tremendously well with Arlene and her chums though.
And as a Corbyn victory would mean waving goodbye to Northern Ireland and (I suspect) Scotland, I think the Tories will perform an Admiral West on Brexit once they sack Theresa May following her confirmed failure to sign a withdrawal agreement.