However great some of the Pharoahs might have been, the Sun has set on their kind of rule, and so it has on Jeremy Corbyn's.
Jeremy Corbyn has now been the leader of the Labour Party for about one year, but, unlike a good leader, he has not been able to gain the support of his MP, or to get rid of them, as a result of which, he has not been able to stamp his authority on the Party he professes to lead. This is bad, very bad.
Jeremy Corbyn has, for nearly a year now, been at war with his MPs, with not the slightest indication that he will be able to make his peace with them and gain their support, or that they or him are minded to bow out of this 'death struggle', for the good of the Party and the country which they say they want to govern.
The mark of any leader of substance, has to be his/her good integrity and prudence. This requires that, in the case of Jeremy Corbyn, he demonstrates the necessary introspection and analysis of the situation he finds himself in - whether or not it is of his making or something which has been foisted upon him, as, indeed, was the leadership of the Labour Party - and form an objective and logical view of whether he can fulfil the requirements of being the leader of the Party of which he is a member.
The fact that Momentum and the thousands of new members they have recruited to the Party, support him, is neither here nor there. Since the fulfilment of the Party's aims, that of being a viable political organisation and attaining the privilege of government the country, is a more onerous and difficult challenge than that of adding tens of thousands of new members in the Party's rank.
The point is this, if, as leader of the Party, Jeremy Corbyn cannot gain the respect and loyalty of most of his Members of Parliament, and organise and build the Party into an effective and winning political organization, then how the hell can he, or, for that matter, his Momentum supporters, expect him to be able to win a general election and form an effective government to govern the country?
Yes, that is right, you would have to be stupid to imagine that, and even more stupid to believe that it will happen.
Politics, whether it should be so or not, has now become a matter of perception; and not necessarily of substance. Irrespective of how much substance, how much humanity and common decency Jeremy Corbyn has, the fact is that his reputation, his credibility has been trashed, and he is now naked, as far as political credibility is concerned. The majority of the British people, it would appear, have now invested in or bought the negative image of Jeremy Corbyn which has been propagated by the media, his opponents, and Jeremy's own lack of savoir faire and susceptibility to slip on banana-skins.
Unfortunately, nothing good can come of Jeremy continuing to occupy the leadership position of the Labour Party. Quite the contrary, he can only further damage the Party, its credibility and chances of it regaining its political relevance as an effective opposition, and a viable challenger for winning a general election and forming a government.
It really is time for people like Diane Abbott to realise the true predicament the Party is in; the fact that it is staring in the abyss and is likely to fall in it. Unless the Party comes together and support a viable leader; yes, one who is younger, is more flexible and politically astute, it will fall into the 'black hole' which it has created for itself. Jeremy Corbyn is not and, at the age of 67, will never be that person.
Yes, it would have been good if the Brutusian MPs, all or most of the 172 of them, would come together and support JC, even if only for the 'appearance of cohesion', but Jeremy Corbyn would have to earn that loyalty by force of character and political capital, neither of which he has in sufficient abundance.
Unless selfishness is his defining attribute, and the destruction of the Labour Party is his goal, the best thing Jeremy Corbyn can do for himself, for his supporters, for the Party and for his country, is now stand aside and ask all his supporters to support an alternative viable candidate for the leadership of the Labour Party.
The Labour Party is still all at sea, apparently without a paddle and an effective leader. Will it be able to find its way back to land and viability?
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