The end of jeremy corbyn | thearticle

Thearticle

The end of jeremy corbyn | thearticle"


Play all audios:

Loading...

Inevitably, the talk turns to the next Labour leader. Even if no party wins a majority this week, and even if Labour ends up as part of a technical government, convened to arrange a new EU


referendum, Labour will have reached the end of the Corbyn era. If voters are not persuaded by the “Get Brexit Done” mantra and do not give Boris Johnson his majority, it is equally unlikely


that Corbyn will get anywhere close to the 330 seats he needs to form a majority Labour government. The best he can hope for is to deny Johnson an all-out victory. At that point, Corbyn


could reasonably declare “mission accomplished”. He would have won his three-point campaign to move Labour significantly to the left, end the nine years of Tory austerity politics, and


humiliate a controversial Conservative leader. What’s more, in Brussels last week, Michel Barnier told me the EU would have no problem with working with Labour, just as his team is ready to


begin the years of talks on a new EU-UK relationship post-Brexit. He did not use the term “oven-ready” but it is clear his now very experienced and expert team of Brexit negotiators can


easily satisfy Labour’s wish for a new Political Declaration that allows the UK to leave the EU in a less harmful way than the hard Brexit both May and Johnson have advocated. Corbyn is good


at campaigning, as he’s showed in the three successful campaigns he’s run since 2015 — two to secure his leadership and one to deny May her majority in 2017. If he wins the ultimate prize


of ending nine years of Tory rule, his triumph as an effective campaigner will be complete. But Corbyn, already in his eighth decade, cannot reasonably expect to advance through his


seventies while bearing the huge burden of leading the country. Moreover, assuming we have a no-majority parliament followed by a second referendum, after that the country will need a


majority government. All this leads inexorably to the fact that Labour needs a new leader. Almost any potential candidate would draw a line under the anti-Semitism issue that has dogged


Corbyn and severely damaged the Labour campaign. He is not an anti-Semite in the classic Jew-baiting sense. Corbyn’s problem is that his life-long dislike of Israel has led to decades of


uncritical support for most pro-Palestinian groups. But he has done this without any grasp of the views that these groups have on Jews. A new Labour leader can start rebuilding relations


with Britain’s Jews. The debate over Labour’s next leader is open. Three points stand out. First, the talk about Corbynites versus Blairites is out of date. Blair’s premiership ended 12


years ago. The New Labour model that won in 1997 is nearly 30 years old. The contest for a new Labour leader will be based on today’s priorities — climate change and the reform of global


capitalism. It is hard to see another man emerging as the Labour leader. Corbynism is the last expression of traditional Labour political masculinity. His clique is dominated by tight


controlling men like the Wykehamist Seumas Milne and  the Merseyside trade unionist, Len McCluskey. Corbyn and McDonnell, are part of the late middle-aged Labour hard left — their time is


past. There are two stand-out potential successors to Corbyn. Emily Thornberry is warm and articulate. She is advised by Damian McBride, one of the great Labour strategists, who learned his


trade under Gordon Brown. Whatever his faults, Brown helped to win and keep Labour in power for 13 years. Thornberry grew up in poverty in a council flat as her father, a posh public school


boy, betrayed his wife and family in a way which has echoes today in our top politics. The other woman in the frame is the Salford solicitor, Rebecca “Becky” Long-Bailey who is 20 years


younger than Thornberry. A catholic, she is regularly depicted as John McDonnell’s protégé. But this label will soon be meaningless. Like Harold Wilson, a cautious, calculating northerner,


she cultivates her image as a left-winger but also has the skill to widen Labour’s appeal. Whether Johnson wins or we move to a no majority government, the Corbyn era is drawing to its


close. The race for the succession is on.


Trending News

Winners and losers at the 2025 baftas | thearticle

The main problem with the BAFTAs, which took place this week, is that, too often, they give too many awards to mediocre ...

Pursuit of love: who is in the cast and when is it on? Everything we know about the new bbc drama

The first episode of the BBC’s new romantic adventure, The Pursuit Of Love, is set to hit our screens It airs at 9:00pm ...

What is the point of labour if starmer won’t scrap cruel tory policies? — scottish national party

Starmer and his Tory-tribute act talk a big game about change – but only the SNP are serious about delivering it. In an ...

Trump administration accepts qatar's jet gift

The Pentagon said Wednesday that it had formally accepted a luxury airliner from Qatar that President Donald Trump has s...

For a moment, facebook thought every post might be hate speech

It might not have been in effect for everyone, but if you loaded up Facebook this morning, you might have found a curiou...

Latests News

The end of jeremy corbyn | thearticle

Inevitably, the talk turns to the next Labour leader. Even if no party wins a majority this week, and even if Labour end...

Northern ireland has been given a massive opportunity. And it is embracing it | thearticle

US golfing megastar Tom Watson is a legend of the links, with a higher early career success rate at the Open – five wins...

Channelnews : huawei mate xs available for pre-order in oz

From the 14th of March Australians will be able to pre-order Huawei’s latest foldable smartphone, the Mate Xs. The model...

How to steer clear of customer service scams

Memorial Day Sale! Join AARP for just $11 per year with a 5-year membership Join now and get a FREE gift. Expires 6/4  G...

Strike, Spare and Scratch - Los Angeles Times

Richard Flacks is the author of "Making History" and a professor of sociology at UC Santa Barbara Forty years ...

Top