He was very clear on Brexit today. The country voted for it, so he intends to get the best possible deal for the British people from the EU, including access to the Single Market. That's not unclear at all.I don't mean to sound pedantic @ImpSaint but your father as a civil servant would have a full civil service pension payable at age 60 and the maximum reckonable service is 40, so the last 5 years he worked his pension would only increased by the amount his final salary was - the state pension is the hundred odd quid you get at 65. The era of decent pensions in the civil service has definitely worsened since 2010. As a civil servant myself with 20 years service currently, in the last 8 years I have had either 1% or 0% annual salary increases, my pension eroded to career average, my pension age increased from 60 to 67.
As for Jeremy Corbyn - it is very easy for him to set out a quite radical manifesto in the belief he is unlikely to be required to fulfil it. It is a manifesto that I broadly agree with, especially unfreezing the pay constraint to the public sector. Where it falls down is that the greed of those above the 'JAM' threshold will not want to pay for it, plus add his unclear approach to Brexit and that many people know that the traditional left support is very split on Brexit leads to him being against the odds for being PM, and I say this as a Labour supporter who may for the first time may vote liberal in my currently tory-held seat in Somerset.
I sympathise with you voting Lib Dem in a Tory seat, that's what I'm going to do as there is no hope of ever electing a Labour MP in Wells under our broken electoral system.