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Friday, May 31, 2024

UK
Keir Starmer refuses to back Diane Abbott to be MP as he looks to 'future' for Labour

The party is being gripped by a huge row over whether the veteran MP should be allowed to stand again for Parliament


NICHOLAS CECIL, POLITICAL EDITOR @NICHOLASCECIL
1 HOUR AGO

Sir Keir Starmer has refused to back Diane Abbott standing at the general election for the party as it looks to have a slate of candidates for the “future”.

Senior Labour figures sought to put a lid on the public row over whether the veteran MP, aged 70, should be allowed to stand again as MP for Hackney North and Stoke Newington.

Deputy Leader Angela Rayner and six union bosses have thrown their support behind Ms Abbott, Britain’s first black female MP.


Ms Abbott, who was suspended from the Labour Parliamentary Party over comments she made about racism, had the whip restored earlier this week.

This was seen at Westminster as part of a plan to allow her to retire as an MP with dignity after her decades-long parliamentary career.

But a huge row erupted after The Times was briefed that the Leftwinger was being barred from standing as an MP.

She later confirmed to The Standard that she believed she was being stopped from standing.

Speaking to BBC Radio Scotland during a visit north of the border, Sir Keir said the decision on Ms Abbott standing for Labour would be made by the party’s ruling National Executive Committee (NEC).

“Diane Abbott has had the whip returned to her, no decision has been taken to bar her from standing and the NEC will come to a decision in due course,” he said.

Asked if he would like her to be a candidate, the Labour leader added: “Ultimately, that will be a matter for the NEC but no decision has been taken.”

He also praised Ms Abbott, first elected in 1987, as a “trailblazer”.

Shadow science secretary Peter Kyle echoed the “trailblazer” praise and that it was a decision for the NEC.

He added that the issue should be treated with “privacy” and in a “sensitive way as possible”

He told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “Diane Abbott was a trailblazer, we have a lot of respect for that.

“This election, though, is about the future and the NEC will be making sure that our party is fit for the future.”

He also stressed that Sir Keir was seeking to impose “standards” in the party after a string of controversies.

Labour withdrew the whip in April 2023 from Ms Abbott after she suggested Jewish, Irish and Traveller people experienced prejudice, but not racism all their lives.

She later said that she wished to "wholly and unreservedly withdraw my remarks and disassociate myself from them".


Labour's handling of Diane Abbott seals Starmer's black betrayal

By shunning Diane Abbott, Keir Starmer's Labour has doubled down on its anti-black purge, ostracising minority voices in the process, writes Richard Sudan.


Richard Sudan
31 May, 2024


If Labour can do this to Diane Abbott in opposition, what might they do in power, asks Richard Sudan [photo credit: Getty Images]


No matter how many black votes Keir Starmer manages to salvage in this summer's general election, they won't be an endorsement of his candidacy but a rejection of the Tory government and the crisis in its wake.

Many disillusioned black voters, however, will likely sit this one out. Starmer's Labour has seriously eroded trust among black and minority communities in the UK, and the damage may be beyond repair.

Earlier this year I wrote in The Voice — the UK's only black national newspaper, that "Keir Starmer doesn't care about black people". Sadly, Labour's actions this week have only confirmed this suspicion. For many black people in the UK, the party they'd been loyal to for decades is no longer for them.

"Labour may win a first term, but they may have now lost the support they need for a second"

We've finally reached the end of our tether. Our patience has reached an end. The relationship has fractured. The idea that black people are permanently wedded to Labour has run its course.

And the Labour Party's handling of Diane Abbott MP — the UK's first black MP and sitting Member of Parliament for 37 years — might be the final nail in the coffin.

Keir Starmer's left-wing purge continues


The reaction, outrage, and protests at Labour's treatment of Keir Starmer is the clearest measure of this increasingly messy betrayal. The prolonged and opaque process surrounding the Hackney North and Stoke Newington MP's suspension — and the contradictory statements from Labour as to Abbott's fate — is a crisis of Labour's own making.

The revelation that the investigation — which kept Abbott suspended for over a year — actually concluded months ago is beyond shocking. It's been a bombshell for our communities. We've been lied to and thoroughly disrespected, yet again.

Malcolm X was an ally to the oppressed. That's why he matters

Whatever mistake Diane Abbott has made she's paid and apologised for. Ill-judged comments do not warrant how Labour has treated the black British stateswoman. Suspending her for over a year is completely disproportionate and without precedent.

It really seems that the delay in releasing the findings of the investigation is a snide ploy and blunt strategic manoeuvre to limit Diane Abbott's influence. Abbott herself criticised the investigation process as fraudulent pointing out the factionalism within Labour that targets black and non-white members disproportionately.

This will have taken a toll on her — she's already received more abuse than any other MP. Juxtapose Abbott's treatment with other MPs, white men, who've been swiftly readmitted to the party having made serious antisemitic comments and done far worse.

Darren Rowell is Labour's parliamentary candidate in Barking despite having made horrendous anti-black comments. Labour frontbencher Steve Reed implied that a Jewish Tory party was a "puppet master". Both cases, predictably, received little press attention.
After Diane Abbott, will the black vote shun Labour?

Hypocrisy, the treatment of Diane Abbott, and the Forde report — which showed that the Labour Party had normalised a culture of anti-black racism within the party — will all be issues in the back of our minds on July 4.

The backlash against Labour’s handling of Abbott’s case, in particular, is profound, and I believe will be a decisive factor in the outcome of the election. Labour may win a first term, but they may have now lost the support they need for a second.

Black and Muslim communities, of which there exists an intersection, will not forgive Keir Starmer for his actions towards Abbott and Gaza.

How the Gaza war loomed over UK's Labour Party conference

But it's not just the treatment of Diane Abbott which is deeply concerning, it's who she is and what she represents to the UK black community. We see the attack on her as an attack on us. Her treatment shows us what we can expect from Labour should they be elected into government; a litmus test of how they view us as the black community and black voters. If Labour can do this to Abbott in opposition, what might they do in power?


Labour's handling of Abbott's suspension is, simply put, a spectacular failure to read the room. It shows sublime ignorance and breathtaking indifference. Diane Abbott represents progress and advocacy within the black community. Her career is characterised by relentless campaigning against racism and inequality, living, enduring, and overcoming obstacles familiar to many of us.

Black people are demanding reparations. It's time to listen

The prolonged suspension and the opaque handling of her case raise serious questions, and possibly damning answers, about Labour’s commitment to racial equality, fair treatment, and judgement.

The calls for Diane Abbott to remain a Labour candidate are not just about one individual’s career, or about the right of constituents to choose their member of parliament, but about addressing a broader issue of justice and representation.

I’d need a thesis to name all of the great parliamentary candidates, and potential candidates who’ve been blocked or sidelined by Labour and the same goes for councillors too. It’s a shameful cynical attack on democracy and is rolling back progress by decades.

Two years ago I thought Starmer was a mediocre technocrat and an out-of-touch centrist regarding his stance on race equality. But it’s more than that. His primary concern is power, not principle, and this makes him dangerous. He’s certainly changed the Labour Party as he liked to remind us – he’s purged it of all of the individuals and ideas which made it popular several years ago and saw membership rise significantly.

What has happened to Diane Abbott is horrendous, but if she isn’t safe then no one is. Several other black MPs have told me recently that they seriously fear deselection. Purge is the common phrase used to describe his control of Labour and it’s entirely appropriate.

Did Keir Starmer misrepresent Welsh Muslims on purpose?

Last year, in a Q&A with the Guardian, Starmer said the trait he most deplores is disrespect. His treatment of Diane Abbott however, suggests it should be at the top of his CV.

You don’t have to agree with Abbott on every issue to acknowledge and condemn the injustice in her treatment. As an MP her positions have often sparked debate. She’s a politician and not beyond criticism. But her consistent championing of social justice, anti-racism, and equality for decades has been steadfast and at the least means she should be permitted to stand and remain as the representative of her constituents if they so choose.

Anything less is an affront to democracy and a direct insult to black communties.

As the general election approaches, how Labour navigates this issue will be crucial. It is not only about Abbott’s future but also about the party’s relationship with its Black supporters and its broader commitment to fairness and equality.


Richard Sudan is a journalist and writer specialising in anti-racism and has reported on various human rights issues from around the world. His writing has been published by The Guardian, Independent, The Voice and many others.

Follow him on Twitter: @richardsudan

In Starmer’s Labour, Only ‘Zionist Shitlords’ Are Welcome

Buckle up, folks.


by Aaron Bastani
29 May 2024



Posters supporting Diane Abbott, who has been barred from standing for Labour at the next general election. Thomas Krych/Reuters

The verdict is in: Diane Abbott will be blocked from standing for the Labour party at the forthcoming election. Could the former shadow home secretary be replaced by a man who describes himself as a “zionist shitlord”? Maybe. Because Labour really is that weird now.

Abbott has been an MP since 1987, making her one of Westinster’s longest serving parliamentarians. While she was Britain’s first black female MP, she was for much of her career better known to the public through her weekly appearances alongside Michael Portillo and Andrew Neil on the BBC’s ‘This Week’.

But then something strange happened: the British left achieved a modicum of power. And so national treasure in waiting, along with Westminster’s resident niceguy (Jeremy ‘allotment-man’ Corbyn) were demonised faster than you can say ‘red scare’.

Both Abbott and Corbyn have lost the whip at different points during Starmer’s leadership. Last week, it was confirmed that Corbyn would not have the option of contesting his Islington seat as a Labour candidate. Abbott has now seemingly met the same fate.

Yesterday, Newsnight’s Victoria Derbyshire broke the news that Abbott’s disciplinary process was settled late last year. Labour subsequently briefed the media that the whip had finally been restored to the Hackney MP. But this, apparently, is a temporary dispensation, and Abbott won’t be allowed to stand again for Labour under any circumstances.

Speaking on Newsnight, the BBC’s Nick Watt described how sources close to Starmer described Abbott as an “icon”, but said she couldn’t stay in the parliamentary party. Why? Because she’s associated with the failure of 2019. This would make more sense if Starmer hadn’t also been a leading Labour light that year, or the party hadn’t recorded a higher share of the vote than in either 2010 or 2015 (Ed Miliband is in Starmer’s shadow cabinet too, remember).

Watt added how his source claimed Abbott “comes up on the doorstep”. While that’s hard to believe, if it’s accurate, then why is her case any different to that of Liam Byrne – who famously left a note to his Tory successor in 2010 claiming there was no money left? Rightwing rent-a-gobs still bang on about that 14 years later.

And here’s the most important part. As recently as last Friday, Starmer told the BBC that Abbott was “going through, and being part of, and getting to the end of … a disciplinary process because of something she has said”. Yet we now know that this process didn’t end last week, but six months ago. So either Starmer didn’t know it had been completed or – more likely – he lied. The latter appears to be something of a habit.

This charade is made all the more grotesque by the fact that Labour, in response to the news that Tory donor Frank Hester said Abbott “should be shot”, sent a fundraising email asking for money. Trying to profit from someone else’s misery – which you soon intend to compound – would seem deeply dishonourable to any normal person. But then again, ‘honourable’ isn’t a word you’d associate with the permanent political class.

Who might Labour seek to replace Abbott? One option would be Mete Coban – a councillor so relentlessly committed to Hackney he recently tried his luck in Kensington. Anntoinette Bramble and Sem Moema are two other names who have been mentioned.

But I’d expect many more to be interested. After all, Hackney North and Stoke Newington has a large majority, is a short distance from the Houses of Parliament and – let’s be brutally honest – has some of the best restaurants and bars in the country. The natural wines at Cadet are a must. Or so I’m told.

One person who may be eyeing up the seat is Luke ‘the Nuke’ Akehurst. After all, he previously lived in Hackney for 16 years, serving as a councillor for 12 of them. Could one of the great civil libertarians of recent years be replaced by someone who thinks the good guys in the Vietnam War were… the Americans? That would certainly say something about the direction of British politics.

Aaron Bastani is a Novara Media contributing editor and co-founder.


Labour’s Messy Leftwing Purge Isn’t As Smart As It Seems

‘Starmer isn’t even in control.’


OPINION
by Moya Lothian-McLean
30 May 2024




Faiza Shaheen, who has been barred from standing as the Labour candidate for Chingford and Woodford Green. John Sibley/Reuters


The era of “Grey Labour”, as writer Alex Niven has dubbed the current iteration of the parliamentary Labour party, has been marked by u-turns and discarded pledges. But in one crusade, Keir Starmer and his kingmakers have remained steadfast from the start: purging the left.

With a surprise election on the horizon, that offensive has stepped up a gear. Last week, Labour HQ confirmed that Jeremy Corbyn would not be able to stand for re-election as a Labour MP in Islington North, after keeping the former leader in limbo since suspending the whip in 2020. Corbyn promptly launched a campaign to represent his constituency of 41 years as an independent.

Yesterday, though, came a flurry of action that I’m dubbing ‘Grey Labour’s Night of the Butter Knives’, as a series of vocally leftwing MPs and prospective parliamentary candidates were blocked from representing the party. It began with a Times exclusive: after months of obfuscation from the Labour leadership, Diane Abbott, Britain’s first Black female MP, was going to be banned from reselection.

At first, both Abbott and Starmer refuted these reports. But by Wednesday evening, Abbott had confirmed the rumours, telling the crowd at a local rally that she had been “banned from standing as a Labour candidate”. She also took to social media to condemn the wider “cull of leftwingers” conducted throughout the day.

Those leftwingers included sitting MP Lloyd Russell-Moyle and party activist Faiza Shaheen, who was, until 12 hours ago, the Labour candidate for Chingford and Woodford Green. Both are firmly on Labour’s left; Russell-Moyle is a member of the Socialist Campaign Group of MPs, and Shaheen has been dubbed the ‘Chingford Corbynista’ by rightwing newspapers.

Russell-Moyle told Novara Media yesterday that he had been informed of his “administrative suspension” as a result of a historic complaint he deems “vexatious and politically motivated”. He won’t be able to contest the complaint in time for the 4 June cut off period for selecting candidates, meaning he is effectively barred from restanding.

Shaheen has suffered a similar indignity: after five years of diligent campaigning as the Labour candidate apparent – and toeing an increasingly draconian line (which occasionally attracted her critique from fellow leftwingers) – her candidacy has been blocked at the last minute by Labour’s National Executive Committee (NEC).

In an emotional interview with BBC Newsnight, Shaheen told presenter Victoria Derbyshire that Labour’s NEC proffered 14 tweets as grounds for her deselection, including ones where she discussed her experiences of Islamophobia within Labour. The NEC had also flagged a tweet Shaheen ‘liked’, which detailed how mild critique of Israel is subject to intense, “hysterical” pushback.

“Moreover, you can’t easily ignore them because those are not just random people,” the supposedly offending tweet read. “They tend to be friends or people who move in the same circles as you. Those people are mobilised by professional organisations.”

Shaheen said she had no memory of ‘liking’ the tweet and apologised for “play[ng] into a trope” by citing “professional organisations” acting in Israel’s interests.

As Shaheen struggled not to cry on live TV, news dropped that Luke Akehurst – Labour NEC member and director of professional Zionist lobbying organisation We Believe in Israel – had been selected without consultation for the safe seat of North Durham.

His candidacy is one of several declared in the last few days, as a slew of Labour MPs – including the brother-in-law of Rachel Reeves – have announced conveniently last-minute retirements. This has freed-up seats for Grey Labour allies to be parachuted in without input from local constituency parties under new selection rules approved by Labour’s NEC last year.

Alongside Akehurst, Josh Simons, director of the powerful pro-Starmer think tank Labour Together, has already been confirmed as one of these candidates, as has lobby journalist Paul Waugh and former Camden council leader Georgia Gould.

The key takeaways here are twofold. Firstly, the faction behind Starmer doesn’t think that this sort of political manipulation – that which disproportionately excludes and disrespects leftwing MPs and candidates from minority groups – matters to the wider electorate. And to most, it probably doesn’t. It won’t stop Labour winning the general election. But it will further disillusion amongst some of Labour’s traditional voter base, already appalled by the right of the party’s war on anything deemed ‘left’ which is currently expressed through attacking anyone publicly opposed to the genocide in Gaza.

There is quite obvious racism at play here – just look at the targets of Labour’s purge. Look at the excuses used to banish them from the party they’ve dedicated lives to, while a lobbyist for a foreign power, currently under investigation for war crimes and genocide, is allowed to stand as a Labour representative. Look at who is shut out and who is welcomed with open arms.

There will be more such examples to come as 4 June approaches. Already Apsana Begum, the socialist MP for Poplar and Limehouse, seems at risk of a fresh deselection attempt after she previously accused Labour of “weaponising” her domestic abuse to push her out of the party. I worry about where the voters alienated by Labour’s machinations will go; which new, economically left but socially conservative parties they might end up clinging to, lured in by those taking unequivocal pro-Palestine stances – but at the cost of ignoring anti-climate change and anti-LGBTQ messaging.

The second conclusion is that Starmer has lost internal authority – if he ever had it to begin with. The purging operation has been a mess of leaks and counter-briefings, piecemeal rumours and rogue emails, all of which expose Labour’s internal wranglings to the general public and make Starmer himself seem weak and out of the loop. Labour right bods boosted into safe seats are also often political hot potatoes, with pasts far more chequered than those leftwingers who have been expelled – risky people that any canny political strategist would not put front and centre.

The fact is that the faction that ushered Starmer into the leadership, and now seeks to install him in Number 10, has little regard for its own figurehead or his – and the party’s – wider reputation. As reported by Politico LondonLabour campaign chief Morgan McSweeney’s eradication operation is going down “poorly” across the political spectrum.

“Starmer isn’t in control,” one Labour insider told me. “He wants to run the country, but he can’t even run his own office.”

This article was amended on 30/05/2024 to reflect that Faiza Shaheen ‘liked’ a tweet referring to professional organisations mobilising pro-Israel support, and did not author it.


Moya Lothian-McLean is a contributing editor at Novara Media.

 

Labour Leadership Disappointed By “Unwelcome Distraction” Of Diane Abbott Row

Keir Starmer speaks at the launch of Labour's six steps for change in Wales on the General Election campaign trail in May 2024 (Credit: PA Images / Alamy)

The Labour leadership is disappointed by the way that the row over longtime MP Diane Abbott’s candidacy has become an “unwelcome distraction”, PoliticsHome understands.


After having the Labour whip withdrawn last year due to alleging that Irish people, Jewish people and Travellers do not experience racism "all their lives”, in comments for which she apologised, Abbott had the whip restored earlier this week.

But it was reported by The Times the same day that Abbott was being barred from standing for re-election. On Thursday, Labour leader Keir Starmer denied that the decision had been made to stop Abbott from being a Labour candidate, and deputy leader Angela Rayner went further. “I don’t see any reason why she can’t stand,” she said on Thursday.

Labour sources say there was a plan agreed that would see the leadership restore the whip and Abbott subsequently announce her retirement – but the briefing to The Times disrupted the arrangement.

A source close to the leadership said the row over Abbott was the result of “tragic miscommunication” and “macho” briefing, and it has become an “unwelcome distraction” during the election campaign.
Related

Local Figures Line Up To Succeed Diane Abbott As Labour Candidate

By Sienna Rodgers
29 May

"Nobody wants this – a load of internal focus – we want to get on with speeches in factories about employment rights," they added. "But in some ways it’s better to get it out of the way before nominations close."

Shadow cabinet member Peter Kyle hinted on Friday morning that Abbott would indeed be barred. “Diane Abbott was a trailblazer… This election, though, is about the future and the NEC will be making sure that our party is fit for the future,” he told the BBC.

The row over Abbott was fuelled further by the deselection on Wednesday of Faiza Shaheen, a left-wing candidate in Chingford and Woodford Green. She said she would be discussing “next steps” with her legal team.

Leadership-favoured Shama Tatler, a Brent councillor who had expressed an interest in the Queen’s Park and Maida Vale constituency, was swiftly chosen by Labour's national executive committee on Thursday to contest the seat. 

Shaheen reacted to the news by tweeting: “Really?! Wow a Brent councillor with no history here at all. They would rather lose than have a left pro Palestine candidate. This is offensive to my community”.

There was also disquiet over the suspension of Lloyd Russell-Moyle, who was the incumbent candidate for Brighton Kemptown, following a complaint that was investigated by the party last weekend. He is no longer eligible to stand as a Labour candidate as there is not enough time to conclude the full investigation process before the candidate nominations deadline next week.

It was widely assumed the move against Russell-Moyle, who is on the party’s left, was a factionally motivated attack. However, the complaint against him is believed to have come from the left – specifically, someone who was removed from the Labour Party for antisemitism.

Russell-Moyle has described the complaint, which is about his behaviour eight years ago, as “vexatious and politically motivated”.

A Labour Party spokesperson said: "The Labour Party takes all complaints extremely seriously and they are fully investigated in line with our rules and procedures, and any appropriate disciplinary action is taken."

Chris Ward, a close friend of Starmer who worked as his aide for six years, has been chosen as Labour’s candidate for Brighton Kemptown.  

Other Labour selections announced on Thursday include trade unionists – Unison's Mark Ferguson and Usdaw's Michael Wheeler, who are also NEC members, plus Community union's Kate Dearden – and NEC member Gurinder Singh Josan. 

Former Starmer staffer Uma Kumaran was also made a candidate. All were chosen directly by NEC panels under emergency selection procedures.


Keir Starmer distances himself from Angela 

Rayner in row over Diane Abbott


The Labour leader broke with Ms Rayner and declined to give a view on whether the veteran left-winger should be allowed to run as a Labour candidate



Archie Mitchell,David Maddox


Keir Starmer denies Labour 'left-wing cull' after Faiza Shaheen blocked from election

Sir Keir Starmer has distanced himself from Labour deputy leader Angela Rayner and refused to say if he would like Diane Abbott to stand in the general election.

The Labour leader broke with Ms Rayner and declined to give a view on whether the veteran left-winger should be allowed to run as a Labour candidate.

A day earlier, the Labour deputy said “as the deputy leader of the Labour Party… I don’t see any reason why Diane Abbott can’t stand as a Labour MP going forward”.


Sir Keir Starmer refused to say if he would like to see Diane Abbott stand 
(Getty)

She heaped praise on Ms Abbott, describing her as an inspiration and a trailblazer. And Ms Rayner appeared to take aim at Sir Keir and his inner circle, stressing that she is “not happy” about negative briefings to newspapers about Ms Abbott from senior Labour sources.

“I don’t think that is how we should conduct ourselves,” she told ITV.

Asked by BBC Radio Scotland for his own view on whether Ms Abbott should be allowed to run for Labour on 4 July, Sir Keir said a decision would be made by the party’s ruling National Executive Committee (NEC).

"Diane Abbott has had the whip returned to her, no decision has been taken to bar her from standing and the NEC will come to a decision in due course," he said.

Asked if he would like her to be a candidate, Sir Keir added: "Ultimately, that will be a matter for the NEC but no decision has been taken."

Labour Party deputy leader Angela Rayner has defended Diane Abbott (PA Wire)

He also praised the MP - the first Black woman to be elected to the Commons - as a "trailblazer".

Despite heaping praise on Ms Abbott, he refused to follow Ms Rayner in giving a personal view on whether he would like to see her continue as a Labour MP.


Ms Abbott was given the Labour whip back this week, but it was briefed out that she would be “barred” from running as a Labour candidate in the general election.

It had been suggested she was planning to retire, but at a rally in support of her on Wednesday Ms Abbott declared that she would stand for parliament again.

Unions have backed Ms Abbott, with TUC president Matt Wrack warning against double standards being applied.

Ms Abbott had the Labour whip returned this week (PA Wire)

Mr Wrack, who is also the Fire Brigades Union general secretary, said: “Diane Abbott is a powerful, popular advocate for Labour. She and other candidates have been treated in an appalling manner.

“There are clearly double standards in how they have been treated as left-wingers and as women of colour when compared to more centrist MPs.”

Ms Abbott said on Thursday she has met with leading trade unionists who have offered her their backing to be a Labour candidate at a meeting next week of Labour’s NEC.

The deadline for the party to rubber stamp its general election candidates is 4 June


Labour must unite and reinstate barred candidates – Matt Wrack, FBU

“There are clearly double standards in how they have been treated as left wingers and as women of colour when compared to more centrist MPs.”
Matt Wrack, Fire Brigades Union General Secretary

In recent days, there have been conflicting reports about the status of Diane Abbott as a parliamentary candidate. Other left wing Labour candidates have also reportedly been barred from running.

Matt Wrack, Fire Brigades Union general secretary, said:

“After 14 years of austerity, misery and chaos, people are sick of the Tories. Now is the time for Labour to unite to sweep them from power. 

“Diane Abbott is a powerful, popular advocate for Labour. She and other candidates have been treated in an appalling manner.

“There are clearly double standards in how they have been treated as left wingers and as women of colour when compared to more centrist MPs. It is only a matter of weeks since hard-right Tory Natalie Elphicke was welcomed with open arms.

“This has all been an embarrassing distraction. The Labour leadership must now act decisively to reinstate the affected candidates and ensure that no one is barred from standing at the last minute with no due process.”


10,000s back Diane – Labour Lords write to Keir Starmer saying let her stand

“The idea that Diane Abbott should not also be permitted to stand as a Labour Party candidate in the forthcoming general election is unthinkable.”
Letter to Keir Starmer from Baroness Christine Blower & Lord John Hendy KC

By Matt Willgress, Labour Outlook

Two well-respected, decades-long labour movement campaigners who are current Labour members of the House of Lords have written to Keir Starmer to deliver in behalf of its signatories a petition in support of Diane Abbott. It has been signed by over 17,500 people from over 550 parliamentary constituencies.

The petition was initiated by the Labour Assembly Against Austerity and Arise – a Festival of Left Ideas.

Their letter reads as follows:

Dear Sir Keir,

We are writing to draw your attention to the fact that over 17,5000 people have now signed this petition in support of the PLP whip to be restored to Diane Abbott petition.

In light of this level of support, the idea that Diane Abbott should not also be permitted to stand as a Labour Party candidate in the forthcoming general election is unthinkable.

As the General Secretaries of ASLEF, the CWU, FBU, NUM, TSSA and Unite said in their recent letter to you on this matter, “For over thirty years – since becoming the first Black woman ever elected to parliament – Diane has stood in every election as a Labour Party candidate.

“We believe that the whip should be restored to Diane and that she should be confirmed as the candidate at the general election for Hackney North and Stoke Newington, which she has represented for so long.”

Yours,
Baroness Christine Blower,
Lord John Hendy KC



Young Labour & Labour Students members urge Starmer to let Diane Abbott stand

“Diane is a trailblazer who inspires thousands of young people across the country, and is a valuable, popular asset to our party amongst young voters.”

Young Labour and Labour Students members have called on Keir Starmer to confirm that Diane Abbott will be allowed to stand as a Labour MP for Hackney North and Stoke Newington. You can read the statement published below:

As young people and students who are members of the Labour Party, we urge you to confirm that Diane Abbott will be allowed to be the Parliamentary candidate for Labour in her constituency now that the whip has been restored. Diane is a trailblazer who inspires thousands of young people across the country, and is a valuable, popular asset to our party amongst young voters. If the PLP can be a broad enough church to host Natalie Elphicke, then it can surely find a space for Diane, who voters in Hackney clearly wish to be their Labour MP.

Aaron Stringer, Nottinghamshire Young Labour
Anya Wilkinson, Lancaster University Labour Club
Alec Severs, Manchester Labour Students
Alex Bourne, Derbyshire Young Labour
Alex Burt, Leicester Young Labour
Alexy King, NTU Labour Society
Django Perks, Yorkshire and Humber Young Labour
Emily Payne, Warwick University Labour Society
Erin Hall, Lancaster University Labour Club
Fraser McGuire, Manchester Labour Students
Harriet Limb, Derbyshire Young Labour
Harry Wrench, Lancaster University Labour Club
James Varney, Warwick University Labour Society
Liv Marshall, Nottinghamshire Young Labour
Luca Dunmore, Cambridge University Labour Club
Niamh Iliff, Nottingham Labour Students
Ollie Chapman, Warwick University Labour Society
Ollie Probert-Hill, North West Young Labour
Oliver Mousley, Derby Labour Students
Rufus Sammels-Moore, Derbyshire Young Labour
Sohail Hussain, Birmingham University Labour Society
Vanisha Karna, South East Young Labour
Will Jones, Liverpool Labour Students


Tuesday, May 28, 2024


Why vote Labour? Thoughts from 1997

28 May, 2024 - Author: Jim Denham



Why would revolutionary socialists (or, indeed serious reformist socialists) call for a vote for the Labour Party when it’s led by a right-wing clique around a right-wing leader whose policies differ only marginally from those of the Tories? That’s the question some on the left are asking, just as some did in 1997 when Tony Blair and the “Millbank Tendency” were in charge (in fact Blair was more openly and unashamedly right-wing even than Starmer).

The article below, published in Workers’ Liberty magazine in April 1997, provides the main arguments for a Labour vote even when the Party seems firmly in the grip of an undemocratic right-wing machine.

Of course, many things have changed since 1997, most importantly that while economic growth at the time of Blair’s election was running at about 2.8%, now it is below 1% and showing little sign of improving – leaving Starmer much less scope for avoiding huge spending cuts. It is also the case that the unions today are generally in a more militant mood and less willing to passively toe the line for the Labour leadership. There are also two unions (the RMT and the BFAWU) that are no longer affiliated to Labour and have expressed a willingness to support non-Labour candidates, notably Jeremy Corbyn in Islington North.

On the other hand, Starmer’s Labour Party is promising some small, inadequate, but real pro-working class measures, most notably the "New Deal for Working People" (where pressure from business interests to water it down seems to have been resisted), the pledge to repeal the Tories’ Strikes (Minimum Service Levels) Act, and to very partially renationalise the railways. Blair, on the other hand, boasted of his unwillingness to make any concessions to the unions and gloried in his embrace of the private sector.

Readers will notice that the article makes much of the threat by the hard-line Blairites in 1997 to break all links with the trade unions and bring in state funding of political parties. In the event the supine compliance of the unions made this unnecessary. Starmer and his people are not, of course, proposing anything of that sort.
So Why Do We Say Vote Labour? (April 1997)

Tony Blair and his friends in the so-called “Millbank Tendency” intend to radically alter or destroy the ties of the Labour Party to the trade unions and the working class. Already they represent policies that constitute a radical break with any recognisable version of old-style reformism. In the discourse of these jumped-up New Labour politicians the unemployed are to blame for unemployment and the poor for poverty.

Blair has said it openly. They want to make the Labour Party into an out-and-out bourgoise party – into a straight bosses’ party like the Democratic Party in the USA, or the British Liberal Democrats. The lesser, halfway-house, versions of the Blair project would, while keeping some formal ties, make the unions junior lobbyists rather than the decisive core of the party. The hardline version would completely cut off and jettison the trade unions.

This is the greatest threat British working-class politics has faced for decades. So we have argued in previous issues of Workers’ Liberty, attempting to rouse the British labour movement against the Blairites, believing that in this situation the first responsibility of socialists is to raise the alarm against all varients of the Blair project.

How, then, should socialists vote in the general election on 1 May? If, as we have argued, an election victory is likely to empower Blair’s Millbank grouping for a major push and perhaps the last push against what is left of the working-class character of the Labour Party, should we not simply refuse to vote Labour in the May general election?

No, we should not: no we cannot. There is no alternative, short of abstaining from politics and asking the working class to do the same, but to vote Labour on 1 May. Simultaneously we must oppose Blair inside the labour movement and prepare to fight a Blair government from day one.

The “Millbank Tendency” have not yet succeeded in fully breaking the class character of the Labour Party: in this general election, New Labour will have the organised backing of the trade unions. The Labour Party remains the working-class movement in politics – a working-class movement that has had its horizons and perspectives brutally cramped and cropped by 18 years of naked bourgeoise rule, and its self-confidence so far undermined that a middle-class nonentity like Tony Blair can rise up within it to the position of saviour and dictator and, it seems, should he choose, liquidator. Lenin long ago accurately defined the the Labour Party as a “bourgeois workers’ party”: it is still a bourgeois workers’ party, but now with the dialectical balance massively tilted towards the bourgeois pole in an entity that was always highly contradictory.

Labour is the only conceivable governmental alternative to the Tory government and on 1 May most members of the labour movement will act accordingly. Anti-Toryism is not enough, but getting the Tories out and breaking the icy grip of 18 years is the only way to begin to open British politics up again.

It is true that this campaign will be a competition of media-judged political beauty and of soundbites. Nuances at best divide the parties on policy. Much of New Labour’s concern is to compete on Tory ground with the Tory Party for last-time Tory voters. The Blair grouping is politically a mere satellite, the moon to the Thatcherite sun – its light is reflected light, its strength a reflection of the strength of the Tories and what they have achieved for the bourgeoisie in 18 years of government. Its purpose is to realise the Thatcher-Major programme in the labour movement and continue their politics, with a change here and there, in the country as a whole. It has grown to its present dominance during the long years of working-class defeat in which the labour movement has grown stagnant, waiting passively for a change of government.

Yes, but Labour’s defeat in the general election would only perpetuate those conditions of all-powerful Tory dominance that have driven the labour movement into its present political mood of self-effacement and the decreptitude which has generated that mood. Probably, that would strengthen Blair’s grip. If the formation of a Labour government will empower the Millbank Tendancy against the labour movement – for example, giving them a chance they do not have in opposition to provide themselves with direct state funding – it will also bring the labour movement up against the reality of what Blair represents. Sooner or later it will impel the labour movement to fight back.

Large numbers of workers will vote Labour despite Blair, or out of an ingrained traditional Labour loyalty that has not deigned to take account of what the Blairites are saying and doing. Quite a few still hope that Blair is only playing a clever game to outflank the Tories with middle-class voters. Millions have expectations that Labour will serve their interests. Dissapointed, they will react against New Labour. These are the elements of a future revolt. That potentiual can only be made real by a Labour election victory. A Tory victory will only perpetuate the conditions that have bred Blairism. The point is that a Labour victory will also begin – it will not happen in a week – to empower the working-class movement with the realisation of its own strength and an awareness that it can rely only on its own strength.

The essential work of socialists in the labour movement now is to help it to such a self-realisation and such a new self-empowerment.

For socialists not to advocate a Labour vote is to stand aside from mass working-class politics now: a few socialist parliamentary candidacies in a constituency here and there, hopeless candidacies in the circumstances, do not and cannot offer workers a governmental alternative to the Tories. For socialists to stand aside is for socialists to cut themselves off from the processs of labour movement political self-renewal.

Trade union conferences this summer will debate what the unions will demand from a Labour government – at present, they are demanding almost nothing, except simply that a Labour government, any Labour government, should exist – and whether and how, the unions should fight Blair’s moves to expel them from any central role in the Labour Party.

Even if it is entirely and mechanically predetermined that Blair will come out on top – and nothing in politics is ever that cut-and-dried – we should be inside, not outside, these political processes. A serious revival of working-class politics must come from inside the unions now affiliated to the Labour Party. The campiagn for a new Labour Representation Committee, endorsed by Tony Benn in the latest issue of the Welfare State Network paper Action, must be built inside the affiliated unions and, insofar as that is possible, inside the Labour Party.

But: even though it’s true, as we have argued, that a Labour victory will begin to rouse the working class to a realisation of its own strength, is it not also true – and is this not decisive? – that it will give the Blair group the last element of strength (state funding) to enable it to cut or choke the unions’ channels into Labour politics? On all the evidence, yes it will. And therefore? Therefore socialists should anticipate events, and break now with the organised labour movement in politics? That would make no sense.

There is nothing we – all the revolutionary socialists of all the tendancies together – can do now to rearrange the circumstances, events and trends that may come together in the general election and after to produce an outright Blairite victory over the old political labour movement. To advocate that workers abstain or vote for only a socialist candidate here or there, which is the same thing – that is a stop-the-world-I-want-to-get-off policy. The “world” will not stop; neither will the “process” in the labour movement. Again: the place for socialists is to be within this process, within the mass politics of the working class movement. It is only there that the Blair coup can be faught. To jump ahead and abstain from the general election and the ongoing struggle against Blairism in the labour movement is only another form of defeatism.

We know what the Blair group intends, we know the weakness of the presently mobilised opposition to what they intend, but it is not serious working-class politics to substitute calculations about what might happen after a Labour victory for the reality of politics now when the labour movement is raising its forces to settle overdue accounts with the Tory party.

For socialists to act in the general election as if the Millbank Tendency’s threat to the working class character of the Labour Party has already destroyed the party’s class character could only help the Blair group do its work after the election more smoothly and easily. It is, in a sense, to hysterically anticipate and act out what we fear and to accept in advance what must be contested for as long and as far as it is possible to contest it.

We repeat: the fight goes on – in this year’s trade union conferences, at the Labour Party conference in October and beyond. Much will depend on what socialists are in a position to do after the election. The Blair group have the commanding positions in the labour movement but they have not clinched their victory yet.

For all these reasons we say vote Labour on 1 May, and simultaneously work to rouse the labour movement to fight the New Labour government’s policies and the Blair project. Otherwise we abandon all real perspectives for creating a new workers’ party based on the unions in the event of outright victory for the Blair project.

What, given the realities of the labour movement, can socialists say to workers when they ask them to vote Labour? We tell the labour movement the whole complex truth. We tell them what Blair represents: new Blair is but old Thatcher writ large. We tell them we think they should vote Labour, but also fight with mobilisations, protests, strikes, and by way of activity within the labour movement – in the trade unions and, so long as this remains possible, in the Labour Party.

In the election the trade unions are funding a Labour Party that promises them nothing and goes out of its way to emphasise that fact. They are mounting a poster campaign that implicitly backs Labour. And they demand from Labour … nothing! We urge workers to tell their union leaders that the unions should not be mindless milch-cows for the New Labour Party. They should insistently demand from the Labour Party and every Labour MP specific pledges – pledges to take the legal shackles off the trade unions, restore the right of workers to take solidarity strike action, to restore the NHS on the principle of providing state-of-the art health care on demand, free at the point of consumption, and to restore the welfare state.

Thursday, May 30, 2024

UK
US comic Jon Stewart pokes fun at Labour's clampdown on left-wingers

It comes amid allegations of a witchhunt against Labour’s hard left



JON STEWART WILL RETURN TO HOST THE SATIRICAL COMEDY SERIES THE DAILY SHOW DURING THE 2024 US PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION FOR ONE DAY A WEEK
 (PA)
PA ARCHIVE
ROBERT DEX @ROBDEXES

US comic Jon Stewart described Labour suspending one of its candidates in north-east London as “the dumbest thing The UK has done since electing Boris Johnson”.

Faiza Shaheen, who ran against former Tory leader Iain Duncan-Smith in Chingford and Woodford Green at the last election, is reported to have been suspended by Labour after she allegedly liked a series of posts on X that downplayed antisemitism accusations.

Among them is said to be a satirical “Israel video sketch” posted online by the US comedian and broadcaster.

When told about it, Stewart responded: “This is the dumbest thing The UK has done since electing Boris Johnson…what the actual f***…”

Ms Shaheen accused the Labour leadership of “double standards” over how she had been treated.

Her suspension along with that of Brighton left-winger Lloyd Russell-Moyle and the confusion over the future of veteran MP Diane Abbott has led to complaints Sir Keir and his allies are carrying out a “cull” of the Labour left.

FAIZA SHAHEEN, PICTURED WITH FORMER LEADER JEREMY CORBYN, IS ON THE LEFT OF THE LABOUR PARTY (GARETH FULLER/PA)
PA ARCHIVE

But Deputy Leader Angela Rayner told the Guardian: “I don’t think it’s a purge.

“I don’t know the details of the individual cases but I do know that we put a robust system in place around vetting and dealing with serious allegations that are made in the party.



“We had to do that because when me and Keir took over the party was failing.”

She told Sky News: “I don’t think Keir is acting in a factional way. You do have factions in the Labour Party.

“But you know, our party will only succeed if we’re a broad church.”


 


Is ‘left wing purge’ key to a Starmer election victory?

30 May 2024

Reports that Labour are set to bar Diane Abbott from standing in the general election have sparked outrage, with the veteran MP accusing Keir Starmer of purging the party’s left wing and alienating voters.

But is the Labour leader and his inner circle willing to lose left-wing voters, if it means they can concentrate on winning over disaffected Conservatives and bringing back Labour supporters who were put off by Jeremy Corbyn?

This week, Rishi Sunak has made a slew of policy announcements – national service for teenagers, cutting so-called “Mickey Mouse” university courses, and a tax giveaway for pensioners – this has left many wondering if the Tories have totally given up on young voters.

Meanwhile, Liberal Democrats leader Ed Davey was pictured falling – or jumping – off a paddleboard in Lake Windermere, but can the party make a splash across the country or is it just about a few target seats?

In this episode of The Political Fourcast, Krishnan Guru-Murthy talks about all this with the Liberal Democrats’ deputy leader Daisy Cooper, former Conservative Universities minister, Lord Johnson, and Meg Hillier, who was Labour Chair of Parliament’s Public Accounts Committee and has been the MP in Diane Abbott’s neighbouring constituency for 20 years.

Produced by Calum Fraser, Silvia Maresca, Shaheen Sattar, Rob Thompson and Nick Jackson.

You can listen to, download and subscribe to the podcast on Apple Podcasts here.

Also available on Google PodcastsSpotifyAcastCastBox and other good podcast apps.

Is Starmer undertaking a ‘purge of the left’?

Political Editor 30 May 2024

Cathy Newman: ‘It’s not a Corbynista cull, it’s quality control. That was the way Sir Keir Starmer tried to explain away the row over the growing list of left-wing candidates being stopped from standing for Labour.

He said today he’s entitled to select the highest quality potential MPs. But he and his deputy Angela Rayner seem to be split over whether Diane Abbott should be one of them, as Gary Gibbon reports.’

Jeremy Corbyn says Sir Keir Starmer is 'clearly intervening' in 'purge' of left-wing Labour candidates

The ex-leader, now running as an independent candidate in the general election, said those being blocked from Labour's list had "all spoken out in favour of a permanent ceasefire in Gaza".


Jennifer Scott
Political reporter @NifS
SKY NEWS
Thursday 30 May 2024


Former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn has accused Sir Keir Starmer of "clearly intervening" in a "purge" of left-wing candidates from the party.

Confusion over whether Diane Abbott will be allowed to stand under Labour's banner on 4 July has dominated headlines in recent days, as well as the suspension of Lloyd Russell-Moyle and the blocking of Faiza Shaheen - with critics of the leadership claiming it is an attack on the left.

But while Sir Keir has continued to say the decisions are not down to him but the party's national executive committee, Mr Corbyn - who is standing as an independent candidate after being expelled from the party himself - focused the blame on his successor.

Speaking to Sky News's political correspondent Serena Barker-Singh about Ms Abbott, Mr Russell-Moyle and Ms Shaheen, the ex-leader said: "The one thing they all have in common, the people that have been purged, is that they're on the left of the party and have all spoken out in favour of an immediate ceasefire and permanent ceasefire in Gaza.

He claimed that reports Ms Shaheen was stopped from running over tweets she liked on X regarding Israel were "a bit thin," adding: "The Labour Party's procedures ought to be more robust and more open than that."

And asked about whether Sir Keir was behind the decisions, Mr Corbyn said: "He claims sometimes it's nothing to do with him and other times that he's made the decision. He better make up his mind what it is.

"I think the leader ought to be independent of the other processes. But he clearly is intervening all along the way."

Former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn has accused Sir Keir Starmer of "clearly intervening" in a "purge" of left-wing candidates from the party.

Confusion over whether Diane Abbott will be allowed to stand under Labour's banner on 4 July has dominated headlines in recent days, as well as the suspension of Lloyd Russell-Moyle and the blocking of Faiza Shaheen - with critics of the leadership claiming it is an attack on the left.

But while Sir Keir has continued to say the decisions are not down to him but the party's national executive committee, Mr Corbyn - who is standing as an independent candidate after being expelled from the party himself - focused the blame on his successor

Speaking to Sky News's political correspondent Serena Barker-Singh about Ms Abbott, Mr Russell-Moyle and Ms Shaheen, the ex-leader said: "The one thing they all have in common, the people that have been purged, is that they're on the left of the party and have all spoken out in favour of an immediate ceasefire and permanent ceasefire in Gaza."

He claimed that reports Ms Shaheen was stopped from running over tweets she liked on X regarding Israel were "a bit thin," adding: "The Labour Party's procedures ought to be more robust and more open than that."

And asked about whether Sir Keir was behind the decisions, Mr Corbyn said: "He claims sometimes it's nothing to do with him and other times that he's made the decision. He better make up his mind what it is.

"I think the leader ought to be independent of the other processes. But he clearly is intervening all along the way."


THE LEFT ARE FINDING OUT THE HARD WAY ABOUT STARMER'S DISTANCING FROM 2019
Political correspondent@serenabarksing

Jeremy Corbyn is a figure that has loomed large in this general election campaign - even though he's not been a Labour MP or even in the party at all for some time.

The Conservatives have always tried to align the current Labour leader, Sir Keir Starmer, to his predecessor in an attempt to conflate their politics.

But the Labour Party is doing all it can to distance itself from the days of 2019 - and members of the Labour left are finding that out the hard way.

Last night, those on the left of the party accused Starmer of a "purge" of left-wing candidates, after a sweep of nominees, who had already begun campaigning in what they'd hoped to be their constituencies, were told they could no longer run for the party.

Faiza Shaheen told me she thought this was not because of any tweets she'd liked, but because of her views on the conflict in Gaza.

Jeremy Corbyn told me he doesn't think the Labour Party looks like a broad church anymore and instead it's a party that only holds "centrist opinions" - and he sees this "purge" as going against anyone with a dissenting opinion.

Sir Keir said today he is not blocking left-wing candidates - he simply wants the "highest quality candidates" in this election.

But it's that comment that has filled many candidates with hot rage. One former senior Labour adviser spoke of the leadership as "little boys drunk on power" - and others are personally offended by what they understand as a personal offence against their character.

They think it doesn't matter about optics because they think the leadership want a fight - they believe the strategy is to look tough on 'radical' voices.

But Faiza Shaheen has been public about the disproportionate number of people of colour who have been affected by the decisions of last night and worries about what it tells voters. "This is not the message Labour should be sending to Black and brown voters," she says.

Others who experienced the purge themselves called Faiza Shaheen's situation a "stitch up" and others have told me the leadership have been hauling in outgoing MPs who have been critical of the leadership for meetings with the leader's office.

Whether this is a concerted strategy or just the culmination of the selection process, the left now believe they know - in the eyes of the newly charged Labour Party - exactly where they stand.

Mr Corbyn had a tumultuous exit from Labour after running the party for four years.

He was first kicked out of the parliamentary party in 2020 after claiming a report into antisemitism under his tenure was "dramatically overstated for political reasons".

But he was ejected from the party entirely after announcing he would be running as an independent candidate in Islington North, having been barred from standing in the seat for Labour.

Mr Corbyn faced his ownJeremy Corbyn says Sir Keir Starmer is 'clearly intervening' in 'purge' of left-wing Labour candidates

The ex-leader, now running as an independent candidate in the general election, said those being blocked from Labour's list had "all spoken out in favour of a permanent ceasefire in Gaza".

Jennifer Scott
Political reporter @NifS
Thursday 30 May 2024


Tony Blair’s reinvented Labour Party pursues a risky ideological ‘purge’

On the center-left of British politics, current leader Keir Starmer wants to show voters Labour is ready for office again. Not everyone’s on board with his methods.
S

The decades-long feud between Brownites and Blairites still defines some aspects of Labour politics today. | Pool photo by Kirsty O’Connor via Getty Images

MAY 30, 2024 
BY TIM ROSS AND STEFAN BOSCIA
POLITICO

The U.K.’s Labour Party is surging back to power — and tearing itself apart.

For the first time since Tony Blair was its leader in 2005, Labour is on course to win a general election, polling more than 20 points ahead of Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s moribund Conservatives.

But Labour’s leader, Keir Starmer, has run into trouble with just five weeks to go before the vote. A bitter and long-running ideological civil war between left-wingers and centrists has flared back into life, reigniting allegations of racism, old tribal disputes and personal feuds. The furor now threatens to disrupt Labour’s seemingly unstoppable march to power.

Starmer likes to give the impression he won the battle for the soul of his party long ago, saving the progressive movement from ruin. A decade and a half in the political wilderness taught him and his team that they need to be moderate, centrist and pragmatic to regain the public’s trust.

Under its previous leader, the radical socialist Jeremy Corbyn, Labour became easy for its opponents to caricature as a gang of hardliners who wanted to renationalize industry, punish the rich, take the U.K. out of NATO and scrap nuclear weapons. Labour under Corbyn was also condemned for failing to stamp out antisemitism.

In 2019, despite winning more votes than Blair did in his 2005 victory, Corbyn’s Labour suffered a crushing defeat — the party’s worst election result since the 1930s.

For more polling data from across Europe visit POLITICO Poll of Polls.

When Starmer took over in 2020, he pledged to reset and win back the voters Corbyn had scared off. The overhaul that followed saw Corbyn and many of his cohorts exit the stage.

This week, the remaining Corbynite socialists on Labour’s hard-left flank found a new cause to rally behind.

One of the party’s most famous politicians, the U.K.’s first Black female MP, Diane Abbott, is claiming Starmer’s team have banned her from standing as a Labour candidate in the July 4 election.

Starmer has said this is factually incorrect, but that hasn’t stopped Abbott and her allies crying foul and the leader’s team seems unsure how to respond.

At first, it seemed Starmer’s officials seemed happy enough to have the fight with Abbott’s backers — who were also Corbyn’s backers. They thought it proved his point that Labour had moved on from the bad old days of election-losing, hard-left failure.

But by Thursday, the dispute was in danger of spiraling out of Starmer’s control. Abbott vowed to defy the leadership and stand in her old seat regardless of whether she’s denied Labour backing. Corbyn had already announced he’ll stand as an independent candidate in his old seat. Faiza Shaheen, another leftwing candidate who’s been denied the chance to stand for Labour, is threatening legal action.

The concern for Starmer is that Abbott, who was suspended last year after saying Jewish people did not face racism in the same way Black people do, will ultimately win a PR battle, even one that is most closely followed by political obsessives on the British left.

On Thursday, Starmer tried to dampen the flames, praising Abbott as a trailblazer. His deputy, Angela Rayner went even further, saying she saw no reason why Abbott could not stand again to be a Labour member of Parliament.

But there are other fracture lines not far beneath the surface of Starmer’s ship. In common with parties on the left around the world, the Labour family has been bitterly divided over how to respond to the Israel-Hamas war. Watered-down climate commitments and Starmer’s restrained tax and spending policies are also sore points for many Labour supporters.

No doubt the damage of the Abbott row would be worse if Labour were not 20 points ahead in the polls and Sunak’s Conservatives were a united fighting machine. Luckily for Starmer, the Tories are even more divided than Labour and show no signs of turning their fortunes around.

But there’s a warning light here for any future Labour administration. Blair’s three election victories represent the most successful period in the party’s history and Starmer has consciously sought to replicate some elements of Blairism. But that time in office was marred by the toxic infighting and a spectacular breakdown in relations between Blair and his chancellor Gordon Brown. The decades-long feud between Brownites and Blairites still defines some aspects of Labour politics today.

If there’s one thing some British progressives still seem to love more than fighting Tories, it’s fighting themselves.

If Starmer is ruthless, he needs to resolve 'purge' row quickly - as Labour faces first election crisis

Labour high command knew "wobbles" would come, but this one is dominating what was at first a slick election campaign for the party, Beth Rigby writes.


Beth Rigby
Political editor @BethRigby
SKY NEWS
Thursday 30 May 2024 

Image:Pic: Thabo Jaiyesimi/Shutterstock


When I asked Sir Keir Starmer a couple of weeks back if he was ruthless, he said he was - but qualified it.

His ruthlessness was trained firmly on trying to get a Labour government that "could change this country for the better".


He was "not ruthless for [his] own ambition" - nor was it ruthlessness for the Labour Party, he said.

"I'm ruthless for the country," said Sir Keir. "The only way we'll bring about change in the country is if we are ruthless about wining the general election."

But that ruthlessness is now blowing up and knocking the party's election campaign off course.



Politics live: Another Conservative defects to Labour
8:56'Ruthless' Starmer tells Sky News he would stop Rwanda flights

After a slick first week, Labour is having its first crisis, as the row over whether to de-select Diane Abbott has seized the headlines and muddied the message.

It has prompted, not just open splits at the top of the party, but wider questions about whether Starmer is purging the Labour Party as left-wing candidates are blocked from standing and loyalists are being drafted into safe seats.

Ms Abbott herself has called it a purge, while Andrew Fisher, who worked in Jeremy Corbyn's team, asked: "Is it racism, sexism, factionalism or a combination of all? Either way, it looks appalling."

After previously iron-tight discipline, the party is beginning to fray at the edges.

Ms Rayner, the most senior woman in the party, came to Ms Abbott's defence today, telling me on the Sky News Daily podcast that she should be allowed to stand if that is what she would like to do.

Yvette Cooper has also weighed in, describing Ms Abbott as a trailblazer and a "really important figure in the Labour party".

Starmer, for his part, says the decision hasn't been taken and will be made by the party's national executive committee.

But there is clear a split - and it looks ill-disciplined at exactly the time when the party needs to show the public that it is not another version of the warring Tories.

Ms Rayner was careful not to lay the blame of this at the feet of Starmer.

She told me when I asked if the party leader was trying to purge the left that she "didn't think Keir was acting in a factional way" - but that doesn't mean others are not.

When I asked her about what Andrew Fisher had said about this being a very bad look for the party, Ms Rayner said: "It's not a great look the way Diane was briefed against."

1:47Rayner: 'No reason why Abbott can't stand as Labour MP'

The briefings in The Times newspaper on Thursday night that Ms Abbott was going to be barred from standing, promoting her defiant response and a rally outside Hackney Town Hall, has taken the issue from being relatively contained to out of control.

And this is the dilemma for Starmer. If he is ruthless about changing Britain, the fewer left-wing firebrands on his benches, the better.

If he only wins a small majority, he needs the support of all his MPs and can ill-afford a left faction frustrating his government.

So de-selecting potentially unruly future MPs and replacing them with loyalists makes perfect ruthless sense.

But when does being ruthless tip over into something more sinister, that seems unfair and actually turns voters off?

Perhaps the Labour high command thinks they can ride it out, purge these left-wingers and the news cycle moves on.

But the party already has a big problem in what are supposedly safe seats with the Muslim community that are angry over their stance on the Israel-Hamas war.

They are also facing an independent Jeremy Corbyn in Islington North.

Does the party really want to kick out the first-ever black woman MP from the party, too?

One senior Labour figure insists to me that this is not a purge and that it's "important" to see all these cases differently.

But even if that is the intention, it is not how it's being received among big chunks of Labour backers and voters.

If Sir Keir Starmer is really ruthless about winning this election, he might be advised to resolve this issue - and quickly.

As Rayner acknowledged, it has become a distraction and that will be - in her words - a "frustration" to Starmer.

His top team have long said they will have wobbles along the way and what's important is how it is handled.

This one needs sorting.


‘I will not be intimidated’: Diane Abbott vows to fight General Election despite being ‘banned’ from standing for Labour

'Diane Abbott has always been standing up and has always been put dow
n.'

By Kieran Kelly@kellyjourno
30 May 2024


Diane Abbott has insisted she will stand as an MP following reports she has been "barred" by the Labour leadership from standing under the party's banner.

It emerged on Tuesday evening that Ms Abbott had the Labour whip restored following an investigation into comments she made about the Jewish community.


But Labour has reportedly banned Ms Abbott from standing under the party banner, meaning she will likely fight for re-election as an independent.

"For as long as it is possible, I will be the member of Parliament for Hackney North and Stoke Newington," Ms Abbott said on the steps of Hackney Town hall on Wednesday evening.

She insisted evening that she was "shocked" to learned she would be banned.

"They haven't personally communicated with me personally," Ms Abbott added.

But the Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer insisted "this is not true" and that "no decision has been made".

Following a report in The Times, Ms Abbott claimed that she had been "banned" from standing as a Labour candidate in July's General Election.

Ms Abbott said this morning: "Although the whip has been restored, I am banned from standing as a Labour candidate."

She went on to confirm her statement writing online this morning: "Naturally I am delighted to have the Labour Whip restored and to be a member of the PLP.

"Thank you to all those who supported me along the way. I will be campaigning for a Labour victory. But I am very dismayed that numerous reports suggest I have been barred as a candidate."

Labour sources told The Telegraph that senior figures in the party are trying to reach a “soft landing” for the MP whereby she can “go with grace”.

Read more: ‘Cutting NHS waiting lists is our priority’: Starmer unveils ‘first steps’ for Government if elected into Downing Street

Read more: Iain Dale to step down from LBC to put himself forward to be selected as a candidate for MP in the General Election

Sir Keir has come under pressure over Diane Abbott's candidacy, after it emerged she had the Labour whip restored on Tuesday following its withdrawal in April last year over comments she made about racism.

The Labour leader continued to refuse to say whether the veteran MP for Hackney North and Stoke Newington would be allowed to stand under his party's banner on July 4

Follow the LBC live General Election blog for all the twists and turns of the campaign train and listen live to LBC on Global Player, our official app

He faced renewed questions after it was reported an internal investigation into Ms Abbott was completed five months ago, but insisted the matter would be resolved by Labour's National Executive Committee "in due course".

Former Labour leader and independent MP Jeremy Corbyn has told LBC's Fraser Knight he will support Ms Abbott as she plans to stand to be the MP for Hackney North.

"I've spent my life fighting for justice, peace and socialism - sometimes you have to fight back against the people who attack us. It's not me they are attacking, or Diane they are attacking, it's the people here," Mr Corbyn told LBC.
Corbyn's message to Starmer

"The Labour party ought to be a broad church and any movement that tends to represent working class has to be a broad inclusive church. You don't achieve things by driving people out - only by bringing people in," the former Labour leader said.


Thousands more back Diane Abbott

MAY 30, 2024

Labour Lords have written to Keir Starmer saying she should stand, while Young Labour and Labour Students’ members from across the country have also spoken out, reports the Labour Assembly Against Austerity.

Two well-respected, decades-long labour movement campaigners who are current Labour members of the House of Lords have written to Keir Starmer to deliver on behalf of its signatories a petition in support of Diane Abbott. It has been signed by over 17,500 people from over 550 parliamentary constituencies.

Their letter reads as follows:

“Dear Sir Keir,

We are writing to draw your attention to the fact that over 17,5000 people have now signed this petition in support of the PLP whip to be restored to Diane Abbott petition.

In light of this level of support, the idea that Diane Abbott should not also be permitted to stand as a Labour Party candidate in the forthcoming general election is unthinkable.

As the General Secretaries of ASLEF, the CWU, FBU, NUM, TSSA and Unite said in their recent letter to you on this matter, “For over thirty years – since becoming the first Black woman ever elected to parliament – Diane has stood in every election as a Labour Party candidate.

“We believe that the whip should be restored to Diane and that she should be confirmed as the candidate at the general election for Hackney North and Stoke Newington, which she has represented for so long.”

Yours,

Baroness Christine Blower & Lord John Hendy KC.”

Baroness Christine Blower said:“Diane has been a stalwart of the Labour Party and an inspiration to so many. It is indeed unthinkable that she shouldn’t be a Labour Candidate in this election.”

Lord John Hendy KC, added: “The idea that Diane Abbott should not be permitted to stand as a Labour Party candidate in the forthcoming general election is unthinkable. It would be the ultimate insult on top of the catalogue of vile abuse she suffered at the hands of the Party recorded by Martin Forde KC in his Report. It must not happen.”

The petition was initiated by the Labour Assembly Against Austerity and Arise – A Festival of Left Ideas. Commenting on behalf of the two organisations, Matt Willgress said: “Each day we see illustrations of the growing support there is for Diane across the whole Labour Party and trade union movement and beyond. The message from thousands of us is clear – let Diane Stand!”

Meanwhile, Young Labour and Labour Students members from across the country have called on Keir Starmer to confirm that Diane Abbott will be allowed to stand as a Labour MP for Hackney North and Stoke Newington. Their statement reads as follows:

“As young people and students who are members of the Labour Party, we urge you to confirm that Diane Abbott will be allowed to be the Parliamentary candidate for Labour in her constituency now that the whip has been restored.

Diane is a trailblazer who inspires thousands of young people across the country, and is a valuable, popular asset to our party amongst young voters.

If the PLP can be a broad enough church to host Natalie Elphicke, then it can surely find a space for Diane, who voters in Hackney clearly wish to be their Labour MP.”

The Open Letter’s initial signatories included Aaron Stringer, Nottinghamshire Young Labour; Anya Wilkinson, Lancaster University Labour Club; Alec Severs, Manchester Labour Students; Alex Bourne, Derbyshire Young Labour; Alex Burt, Leicester Young Labour; Alexy King, NTU Labour Society; Django Perks, Yorkshire and Humber Young Labou; Emily Payne, Warwick University Labour Society; Erin Hall, Lancaster University Labour Club; Fraser McGuire, Manchester Labour Students; Harriet Limb, Derbyshire Young Labour; Harry Wrench, Lancaster University Labour Club; James Varney, Warwick University Labour Society; Liv Marshall, Nottinghamshire Young Labour; Luca Dunmore, Cambridge University Labour Club; Niamh Iliff, Nottingham Labour Students; Ollie Chapman, Warwick University Labour Society; Ollie Probert-Hill, North West Young Labour; Oliver Mousley, Derby Labour Students; Rufus Sammels-Moore, Derbyshire Young Labour; Sohail Hussain, Birmingham University Labour Society; Vanisha Karna, South East Young Labour; Will Jones, Liverpool Labour Students; Zack Hayward, Cambridge University Labour Club.

The petition supporting Diane can be viewed here.  The petition has also been supported by numerous prominent figures on social media including MPs in the last Parliament Bell Ribeiro-Addy, Beth Winter, Richard Leonard, Richard Burgon, Apsana Begum, Jon Trickett, Nadia Whittome and Ian Lavery.

The General Secretaries of six affiliated trade unions – ASLEF, CWU, FBU, NUM, TSSA and Unite – recently wrote a letter to Keir Starmer asking for the whip to be restored and Diane to be a Labour candidate. It can be read here.

Starmer Is Purging Women of Colour
30.05.2024
THE TRIBUNE

Labour’s disgraceful treatment of Diane Abbott and Faiza Shaheen sends a very clear message to Black and Asian voters — give us your votes and know your place, or face humiliation.



(Photo by Hollie Adams/Getty Images)

‘Honestly I’m so shocked right now, to be treated this badly,’ said a visibly shaken Faiza Shaheen, on the verge of tears last night. She was on Newsnight, describing how she’d been sent an email an hour earlier telling her she was being deselected as the Labour candidate for Chingford and Woodford Green. Shaheen, a British-Pakistani woman, the daughter of a car mechanic, is the latest casualty of Starmer’s purge. Her crime? Detailing her own experiences of Islamophobia within the party and liking a tweet of a Jon Stewart sketch from many years ago.

It comes just a day after Labour sources briefed the Times that Diane Abbott, Britain’s first Black woman MP, would be barred from standing as Labour’s candidate in Hackney. This isn’t the first time Abbott has been humiliated by the party. The former Shadow Home Secretary received half of all abusive tweets sent to female MPs in the run-up to the 2017 general election, according to research by Amnesty International. A Labour document, leaked in April 2020, revealed WhatsApp messages showing that when Abbott was found crying in the toilets in the wake of such abuse, senior Labour staffers were mocking and insulting her.

The few remaining Socialist Campaign Group MPs in the party have remained tight-lipped about the whole ordeal, fearful that they might be next. This is the culture of fear that Starmer’s bully boys have created within the party. Where speaking up on genocide in Gaza or expressing concerns about Labour’s lack of ambition on tackling child poverty is perceived to be a punishable offence. Dissent will be crushed. Racism will be tolerated. And pluralism is as ugly a word as socialism. Welcome to Keir’s Starmer’s changed Labour Party.

If you’re a white male MP like Barry Sheerman, who happens to be an ally of the current leadership, you can joke about how there’s been a ‘run on silver shekels’ when two Jewish businessmen miss out on peerages, and get a slap on the wrist. If you’re a Black woman MP like Kate Osamor and you highlight genocide in Gaza, you will be suspended for months and ordered to repent for your sins.

Speaking in Monmouthshire today, Keir Starmer said he wanted ‘the highest quality candidates’ to stand. A white male MP like Neil Coyle, who is firmly on the party’s right, can racially abuse journalists and have a complaint of sexual harassment upheld against them and still be on the ballot paper at the next election, while a socialist Black woman like Diane Abbott, who has given 4 decades of service to the party, is deemed unfit to stand for office for ill-judged comments in a letter that she apologised for straightaway.

This is a party that welcomes right-wing Tory MPs like Natalie Elphicke — a woman who used a debate about Boris Johnson’s misconduct to demonise refugees, launched an unhinged attack on Marcus Rashford’s campaigning on child poverty and was suspended from the Commons for trying to ‘improperly influence’ the penalty meted out to her sex offender husband.

This was never about standards. And it is about more than just factionalism. It is a continuation of a trend where outspoken Black and Asian members of the party are treated with utter disdain.

The Forde report, released in 2022 after a 2-year delay, accused the party of ‘operating a hierarchy of racism or discrimination’, with many forms of racism and discrimination being ignored. It noted that ‘the criticisms of Diane Abbott are not simply a harsh response to perceived poor performance—they are expressions of visceral disgust, drawing on racist tropes, and they bear little resemblance to the criticisms of white male MPs elsewhere in the messages.’ Over 1,100 submissions were made to the inquiry, detailing widespread anti-Black racism and Islamophobia within the party. One witness said: ‘I write this submission to you feeling degraded, overlooked and insulted on so many levels. I am a prime example of why so many say the party has a problem with race. It is why you can count on one hand the number of senior Black women in the party, and on multiple hands the number of Black people that have left.’

Just a few weeks before the Forde Report was published, Apsana Begum, the first hijab-wearing Muslim MP, and a survivor of domestic abuse, was signed off work by her GP following an alleged campaign of misogynistic abuse in her local party. The Labour leadership failed to intervene.

And a survey in 2020 by the Labour Muslim Network prior to the release of the Forde report found 1 in 3 Muslim members of the party had experienced Islamophobia, and more than half of those surveyed said they didn’t trust the Labour leadership to tackle it.

The Labour leadership like to claim that they have put all of this behind them, but just last year, Black Labour MPs wrote a letter to Keir Starmer, demanding urgent action from the Labour leadership to tackle anti-black racism. A section of the letter, shared with Channel 4 News, read, ‘Despite our Party’s claims to be anti-racist… We, our members and supporters are losing faith in the ability and commitment of this leadership to tackle the issues raised in the Forde report and we demand urgent action.’

Over four decades ago, an almighty struggle was waged to ensure greater Black representation in the party. The Labour Party Black Sections went up against numerous barriers, including Neil Kinnock’s controversial decision to block Martha Osamor from standing in Vauxhall. Minority communities were seen in a similar manner to the broader Left — a problem to be contained rather than a vital part of Labour’s supposed broad church.

From defending the rights of refugees to calling for a ceasefire in Gaza, it has often been Black and Asian MPs unapologetically championing the demands of the communities they represent who have been on the receiving end of deselection attempts and purges. For the Labour leadership, it is far easier to backtrack on their support for Kashmir or ditch any reference to systemic racism when critical Black and Asian voices are no longer in the room.

The Labour Right control the internal apparatus of the party and clamp down on any dissent but they cannot control the public mood outside Westminster. The return of mass politics, as demonstrated by the hundreds of thousands marching for a ceasefire in Gaza while frontbenchers were briefing against it will prove to be a serious thorn in the side of an incoming Labour Government. The last few days have demonstrated that even Starmer can’t control the right-wing clique that now runs the party. Its briefings, from racist dog whistles comparing Muslim voters to Hamas in the West Midlands to determining the fate of those Black and Muslim politicians they despise, illustrate not just a hideous rot at the top of the party but immaturity and arrogance in equal measure. And it will come back to haunt them.

Labour’s strategy of targeting swing voters in marginal seats at the expense of their traditional voters will almost certainly win a sizeable majority in the upcoming election. But history tells us that disregarding loyal supporters will have long-term consequences. Black and Asian voters disproportionately reside in Labour’s traditional working-class heartlands. Voters made their anger on Gaza clear in the Rochdale by-election and in recent local elections where the party lost support in places like Oldham, Bradford, Newcastle and Blackburn.

The rise of the Scottish National Party, UKIP, and the Brexit Party is a cautionary tale of what happens when loyal party supporters feel they are not being listened to. ‘Hold your nose and vote Labour to get the Tories out,’ we are told.

As the stench of Islamophobia and anti-Black racism in the party gets stronger, many are, indeed, holding their noses. Labour’s contempt for our communities stinks.
About the Author

Taj Ali is the editor of Tribune.