I do think May lost her own election. She was either badly advised or made poor choices. But it started in Halifax when she told voters the triple lock would go and their houses would be set against all their social care costs. Interestingly, what she proposed was better than what now exists, but the only words the voters heard were 'house' and 'lose'. It wasn't explained well enough.
But there is one giant question which all the pro-Corbynites haven't answered: if May was every bit as bad as many are now saying she was, how is it that Labour didn't wipe the floor with the Tories?
In case anyone needs reminding, Tony Blair in the 1997 election gained 416 seats for Labour. To show it wasn't simply a fluke, in the next election in 2001 he gained 413 seats for Labour. Incredibly, he then went on to win a third term. And I'd also remind the pro-JC followers that it was the Labour left that turned on the man who introduced the National Minimum Wage Act, Human Rights Act, and Freedom of Information Act in the first term alone. He wasn't perfect, but those applauding how well JC has done would do well to look at how well it can be done.