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Vol 45 | Issue 22
MODI GETS TOUGH ON INDUS TREATY
IS LABOUR BACKING THE WRONG HORSE?
P26
1st October to 7th October 2016
The biggest news this week was Jeremy Corbyn's re-election as Labour leader. He comfortably beat his challenger Owen Smith by garnering 61.8% of the vote, a larger margin of victory than last year. Corbyn was first elected Labour leader in September 2015, when he defeated three other candidates and got 59.5% of the vote. Now, all that is fine. Winning in any game is good, but it's important to last long. There is no point in winning the battle only to lose the war. The war is in 2020. Yes, the general elections. Can Labour under Corbyn come to power again? That's the moot point. A party that had three back-to-back general election victories under the Teflon prime minister Tony Blair, can it once again make it to the top? There is a strong feeling that the Labour Party has chosen the wrong leader? It is backing the wrong horse. The cheer around Corbyn's win is likely to be short-lived. Already the party was reeling under Corbyn's
Let noble thoughts come to us from every side
poor leadership, it had miserably failed to connect with its voters, his re-election is nothing but another nail in Labour's coffin. Or to say, so long a s
Corbyn is at the helm of Labour Party, the Tories will have a good time in the electoral battle. However, in his leadership victory acceptance speech, Corbyn urged Labour to “wipe the slate clean” and vowed to bring Labour back together, saying “we have much more in common than divides us”, insisting the party could win the next election as the “engine of progress” in the country. Corbyn said both he and Smith were part of the “same Labour family” as he appealed for unity.
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Jeremy Corbyn
Well, these are nice words to listen to, but practically everyone knows, including the party insiders, that Corbyn can't regroup the party. There is plenty of evidence, or at least polling, to suggest that Labour will be annihilated at the next election. The party could quite conceivably suffer a collapse in support comparable to the one it experienced in Scotland last year, with its share of the popular vote ending up at the 25% mark. According to Labour supporters, the party is unlikely to win the next general election under Corbyn. A poll conducted by Sky New's Data team in July found 59% of Continued on page 8
Stop dreaming Kashmir, Sushma tells Pakistan
Close on the heels of India's UN Secretary Eenam Gambhir's flaying 'Ivy League of Terrorism' speech at the UN, External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj delivered an emotional, yet level-headed speech at the UN General Assembly, where she named Pakistan and India's problem with the terrorism supporter. Continued on page 26
Sushma Swaraj
PSLV puts 8 satellites in two different orbits
Report on page 26