Author Topic: Tory MP Natalie Elphicke defects to Labour over 'broken promises of chaotic govt  (Read 785 times)


Nearly Sane

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Odd statement from Elphicke who seems upset that the Tories got rid of Johnson:


Today I announce that I have decided to join the Labour Party and that I will sit in Parliament as a Labour MP.

When I was elected in 2019, the Conservative Party occupied the centre ground of British politics. The party was about building the future and making the most of the opportunities that lay ahead for our country.

Since then, many things have changed. The elected Prime Minister was ousted in a coup led by the unelected Rishi Sunak. Under Rishi Sunak, the Conservatives have become a byword for incompetence and division. The centre ground has been abandoned and key pledges of the 2019 manifesto have been ditched.

Meanwhile the Labour Party has changed out of all recognition. Since 2019, it has moved on from Jeremy Corbyn and now, under Keir Starmer, occupies the centre ground of British politics. It has accepted Brexit and its economic policies and defence policies are responsible and can be trusted.

Most significantly for me, the modern Labour Party looks to the future – to building a Britain of hope, optimism, opportunity and fairness. A Britain everyone can be part of.

I have carefully considered this decision. The change has been dramatic and cannot be ignored. For me key deciding factors have been housing and the safety and security of our borders.

From small boats to biosecurity, Rishi Sunak’s government is failing to keep our borders safe and secure. Lives are being lost in the English Channel while small boat arrivals are once again at record levels. It’s clear they have failed to keep our borders secure and cannot be trusted.

On housing, Rishi Sunak’s Government is now failing to build the homes we need. Last year saw the largest fall of new housing starts in England in a single year since the credit crunch. The manifesto committed to 300,000 homes next year – but only around half that number are now set to be built. Renters and leaseholders have been betrayed as manifesto pledges to end no fault evictions and abolish ground rents have not been delivered as promised.

The last couple of years have also seen a huge rise in homelessness, in temporary accommodation and rough sleeping - with record numbers of children now in temporary accommodation, without a secure roof over their head.

Meanwhile Labour plan to build the homes we need, help young people onto the housing ladder and care about the vulnerable and homeless. That’s why I’m honoured to have been asked to work with Keir and the team to help deliver the homes we need.

We need to move on from the broken promises of Rishi Sunak’s tired and chaotic Government. Britain needs a Government that will build a future of hope, optimism, opportunity and fairness. A Britain everyone can be part of, that will make the most of the opportunities that lie ahead. That’s why it’s time for change. Time for a Labour Government led by Keir Starmer. The General Election cannot come soon enough.

jeremyp

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Since then, many things have changed. The elected Prime Minister was ousted in a coup led by the unelected Rishi Sunak. Under Rishi Sunak, the Conservatives have become a byword for incompetence and division.


I think supporters of Theresa May could reasonably have said the same thing of Boris |Johnson and his government.

I'm not a fan of crossing the floor. Bearing in mind that most MPs are elected because they are the representative of the political party that wins the seat, the honourable thing to do is to resign and force a by-election 
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Nearly Sane

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I think supporters of Theresa May could reasonably have said the same thing of Boris |Johnson and his government.

I'm not a fan of crossing the floor. Bearing in mind that most MPs are elected because they are the representative of the political party that wins the seat, the honourable thing to do is to resign and force a by-election
I think there's an argument that the govt has changed so substantially since 2019 that it would be reasonable to say it isn't the basis on which you were elected, and resign the whip. I'm baffled, given Elphicke's previous statements, how she sees the Labour Party as being in line with what she believes.

Nearly Sane

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My understanding is that Elphicke hadn't announced that she was standing down, but that she won't be standing in Dover for Labour. Can't see that she will be standing anywhere else for them so I presume the floor cross effectively means she's standing down.

Steve H

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I think supporters of Theresa May could reasonably have said the same thing of Boris |Johnson and his government.

I'm not a fan of crossing the floor. Bearing in mind that most MPs are elected because they are the representative of the political party that wins the seat, the honourable thing to do is to resign and force a by-election
I agree in general, but this soon before the General Election, it's not worth it.
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Aruntraveller

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It is useful for the party that an MP defects to as it allows them (Labour in this case) to lean more heavily into the narrative of disarray.

As a general rule though it always strikes me as somewhat disloyal and self-serving on the part of the individual involved.

As with others, I believe they should stand down as an MP, give their reason (I believe X Party now represents me more) and take their chances at the ballot box.  Although that would be a bit messy when Labour presumably have a candidate in place this late in the parliament.
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Nearly Sane

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It is useful for the party that an MP defects to as it allows them (Labour in this case) to lean more heavily into the narrative of disarray.

As a general rule though it always strikes me as somewhat disloyal and self-serving on the part of the individual involved.

As with others, I believe they should stand down as an MP, give their reason (I believe X Party now represents me more) and take their chances at the ballot box.  Although that would be a bit messy when Labour presumably have a candidate in place this late in the parliament.
And have had for some time


https://www.itv.com/news/meridian/2023-01-20/labour-candidate-mike-tapp-claims-dovers-levelling-up-funding-plugging-holes

Nearly Sane

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Of course the whole thing has soap opera elements with Elphicke having become the candidate after her then husband was charged for sexual assault which he was later found guilty of, and she was suspended from Parliament for a whole day after trying to influence judges sentencing him, and then sold the story of her divorce for £25k


https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natalie_Elphicke

ProfessorDavey

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Very odd defection give that she wasn't on the centre-right of the tories.

I do wonder whether Labour have a few more of these lined up. There seems to be a broader message than just the simple defection.

Doctor and ex minister defects and launches a broadside on tory policy on the NHS.

MP for Dover (right on the front line of the small boats crisis) defects and launches a broadside on tory policy on the small boats.

And in both cases (I gather) they will stand down at the GE so no suggestion they are defecting so they can be parachuted into a safe seat for Labour.

Nearly Sane

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Nearly Sane

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Not everyone is happy

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-68980700


Apparently a Labour spokesperson was asked if they would accept Farage, and couldn't say no.

Nearly Sane

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Nearly Sane

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