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None of them would have been my ideal, but if I still had my vote I would have voted Ed Miliband.

I am no longer a member due to me fecking hating the local branch of whoooermeisting, corrupt, self serving, jobs for the boys, bunch of total and utter b'stards.

I would quite happily have some kind of mental moment and send a team of ninjas in to kick each and every one of thems arses.

In particular me Dad
Leccy
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I'd want a 'none of the above' box, and make them pick some proper Labour candidates next time, instead of a row of Blair/Brown accolytes and professional self-publicist and taxpayer-funded freeloader Diane Abbott
I used to like Diane until she turned into a hypocrite and didn't feel she needed to defend or explain her decision.
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Having said that I don't hate Ed Balls as much as I probably should
Same here, I feel I should dislike him, but when I listen to him, he doesn't sound so bad. My choice would be Andy Burnham. I know he's young, but he has come out with a lot of sense lately. The Millibands are having a family feud, David is too pompous and Ed is too awkward.
cologne 1
I had two votes. So that was two to Ed Milliband. Dianne Abbot is ok, the bit about schooling is a red herring, but she has no chance, likewise Andy Burnham. David Milliband appears to have Blair's rich backers behind him. Ed Balls ticks some boxes but will never be forgiven for his vindictive attitude towards that head of social services. ÂĢ140 k costs? He's from a different planet!
Garage Joe
As a Labour voter, Andy Burnham is my first choice as Labour needs to ditch the legacy of New Labour and trying to be better Thatcherites than the Conservatives.  They should be aiming to  provide a clear left wing alternative to the coalition parties and he seems like the one most likely to take the Labour party to the left but not in a suicidal way like Diane Abbott would. 

Andy Burnham is an outsider so my second choice would be Ed Miliband.  I think Tony Blair anointing David Miliband as the heir to Blair has probably been the kiss of death to his campaign.

I wasn't at all impressed by Tony Blair's justification of New Labour, which to me amounted to the end justifying the means.  That is, adopting watered down Conservative policies as a means of gaining office.  Personally, I'd rather the Tories be in power than Labour putting a red rosette on Tory policies in government.

I like a lot of what Ed Miliband's saying and his campaign is leading the debate in a way that his older brother's isn't.
Carnelian
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As a Labour voter, Andy Burnham is my first choice as Labour needs to ditch the legacy of New Labour and trying to be better Thatcherites than the Conservatives. They should be aiming to provide a clear left wing alternative to the coalition parties and he seems like the one most likely to take the Labour party to the left but not in a suicidal way like Diane Abbott would.
cologne 1
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Who cares? Labour are about to go through a period pretty similar to that the Tories went through post 1997. Whoever wins won't be leader by the next general election .
History rarely repeats itself.  There's every reason to think the Tories with the aid of a sympathetic media will steamroller the Labour message and win again but there's every reason to imagine we might be going through a period of political instability where the coalition falls in a few years time  and the Tories are booted out well before 2015.
Carnelian
Absolutely Garage Joe
I think being better Thatcherites than the Tories (although Blair never dared put it that way) is fighting the battles of the mid 1990s, when it could be said that putting a sugar coating on Thatcherism but retaining left of centre ambitions, was the way forward.

However, looking back on all the large majorities Labour had and how little they changed the country for the better it has to be said (IMO) that the Blair way, while not being a total failure certainly failed more than it succeeded.

Pursuing a financial services deregulation policy that out-Toried the Tories has caused so much damage to the country's finances in retrospect that it should never be repeated.  When the warmongering is also considered, it really should be enough to kill off the New Labour project.
Carnelian
Cologne, I agree, the way Andrew Neil (who's hardly Paxman) ripped Diane Abbott apart over her use of private schools was clear indication that she would be torn to shreds if she became leader. 

Her excuse that black women will do all they can for their kids (as if white women wouldn't) suggested that she would be torn to shreds by the national media and fall into every laid trap by right wing journalists to cast her as a racist.  Then going on to refuse to further explain herself is the stuff that makes Gordon Brown's 'bigot' comment look like a political master class.

I'm sure she'd do well in the rock solid Labour heartlands but nationally she'd be crucified.
Carnelian
Finally decided and have also cast my rl vote:
1) Ed Milliband : seems to be more principled, more left wing, more committed to fundamental change and much less arrogant and patronising than the other two realistic candidates and is committed to a 50:50 cabinet of men and women
2)+3) Andy Burnham, Diane Abbott......like most of what both of them have to say but they're not really in the race, nor do I think they would make good leaders
4)+5) David Milliband and Ed Balls.....PLEASE don't let it be either of these two!
FM

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