Sitting immediately outside Echo Arenea in Liverpool, the venue for Labour’s UK conference, is the John Lennon Peace Memorial.
The Beatles are inescapable here. Shadow Chancellor John McDonnell even closed his keynote speech by saying the word “imagine” over and over again.
But any thoughts of love and harmony – so often preached by the Fab Four – are a distant dream for politicians and activists in this party.
The only thing which could cause more arguments would be who is assuming the role of Yoko Ono and will eventually cause Labour to split.
Creative differences could barely be any greater between Kezia Dugdale and Jeremy Corbyn right now.
As the Scottish Labour leader strolled across the stage to deliver her conference speech, her UK counterpart sat grumpily.
It barely mattered that she was talking ’bout a revolution of tax rises to pay for education services, Dugdale has been winning this week’s power struggle.
By all accounts Kez vs Jez has resulted in a lot of twisting and shouting behind closed doors, with the Scot coming out on top over her proposals for greater power and more autonomy.
“We can work it out,” they say in public. We’ll see.