Since Jeremy Corbyn became the leader of the Labour Party,
let’s not forget, with a massive majority in the member’s ballot, there has
been constant sniping from the Labour Right. Leaks to newspapers from shadow
cabinet Ministers, ‘senior MPs’ and random Blairite ex spin doctors, have
abounded.
Mutterings about how fit Corbyn and his shadow chancellor John
McDonnell are for office, poor opinion poll ratings for Labour and stories of
splits over policy with shadow cabinet members all are meant to show a party in
turmoil. It has all been part of a softening up process, readying the ground
for a coup.
The current disagreement between Corbyn and his shadow
cabinet has though taken this confrontation to a new level. Ironically, this, what
now can only be called a civil war, has been triggered by a real war issue in
Syria. As perhaps over a
hundred Labour MPs contemplate voting with the government for extending
airstrikes into Syria, this is the first full scale rebellion by the Labour
Right since Corbyn’s election.
The strategy seems to be at this stage, to try and force
Corbyn into resigning, ‘for the good of the party’. How can he be leader when more than half of
the shadow cabinet are against him they ask? The damage that this split will do
to the party, only goes to make a Tory win in 2020 inevitable, and look at all
those working class folk who will suffer. If Labour polls badly in Thursday’s
by-election in Oldham West, the pressure will increase even further.
The problem with all of this for the plotters is that Corbyn
shows no sign of resigning and even if they can force another leadership
election, all the indications are that Corbyn will win again amongst the
membership. With Corbyn allowing a free vote for his MPs, and if they vote in large
numbers against his position, he will look weakened, and that is a
victory for the rebels. Then they will return to the drip, drip of damaging
media leaks.
The Labour Left are probably not going to take this lying
down though, and I was alerted to this by a blog by David Osland, a well-known
figure on the Labour Left. Writing on the Left
Futures blog, in a piece titled ‘Time for the Labour Left to debate
reselection of MPs’, Osland says:
For the past three
months, the very word ‘reselection’ has been unmentionable in Labour left
circles, for fear that even talking about it would represent an unwarranted
provocation of the Labour right. But as the events of the last 48 hours clearly
underline, it’s time to break the taboo.
At the very least,
Corbyn supporters now have to – how can I put this gently? – engage in measured
debate on how we approach the next round of trigger ballots for sitting MPs.
He goes onto quote the ex-Labour arch Blairite Dan
Hodges writing in the Telegraph saying ‘hey, let’s not kid anybody. This is
‘Game On’, right?’
A member of the Labour Party that I know tells me, that in
his south London constituency, the new members are causing tension in the local
party as the old guard resist their attempts to get the party behind Corbyn’s
new old Labour platform. My friend describes himself as on the Labour Left and
voted for Corbyn, but he doesn’t think Corbyn will be Labour leader at the next
general election.
The problem for the Labour Left, is that it will take time
to organise successfully, many years probably, and time doesn’t seem to be in
Corbyn’s favour. The elections next May for the Scottish Parliament and the
Welsh and London Assemblies will need to show an improvement in Labour’s
electoral appeal, or things could get very bleak for Corbyn.
Labour’s warmongering foreign polices of recent years make
this issue totemic for the changed party that Corbyn's leadership signals, many members and supporters left Labour
over the Iraq war, me included, and to put behind them those years, Labour
needs to oppose a further escalation of our military actions abroad. I think
for the Labour Right, it is the best chance yet for them to topple Corbyn.
Labour has traditionally been rather sentimental over its
leaders, and unlike the Tories, rarely force their leaders out. I think Corbyn
is an exception, and it is just a matter of time before someone plunges the
metaphorical dagger into his back (or front).
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