Britain’s main opposition Labour party sends out ballot papers Friday
for its leadership election, with Jeremy Corbyn, a veteran socialist who
would move the party significantly to the left, favourite to win.
The 66-year-old only entered the race as a wildcard but has attracted
surging grassroots support, prompting backers to adopt the slogan “Jez
We Can” in an echo of Barack Obama’s 2008 presidential campaign rallying
call.
But Corbyn’s policies are closer to Greece’s hard-left Syriza than
Obama. Many top Labour figures warn the party under him could not take
power in a country where elections are typically won or lost on the
centre ground.
“The party is walking eyes shut, arms outstretched, over the cliff’s
edge to the jagged rocks below,” Tony Blair, Labour’s prime minister
between 1997 and 2007, wrote in Thursday’s Guardian newspaper.
“It is a moment for a rugby tackle if that were possible.”
The results of the election will be announced on September 12, with
over 600,000 members and supporters of Labour eligible to vote.
Supporters of Corbyn — whose wardrobe of battered jackets and
trousers contrasts with the smart suits more common at Westminster — say
his unspun approach and lack of connections with figures like Blair
give him a fresh voice at a time of deep public cynicism about politics.
He has been an MP since 1983 but has never held a frontline political
job, instead opposing austerity cuts and the 2003 Iraq war, which left
Blair deeply unpopular, from the backbenches.
Corbyn also wants to scrap Britain’s nuclear weapons, renationalise
some industries such as the railways and involve Hamas and Hezbollah in
peace talks with Israel.
“The mood is there and we happen to be in the middle of it,” Corbyn
said in a Guardian interview this month. “We are not doing celebrity,
personality, abusive politics — we are doing ideas.”
– Other candidates lack momentum –
The leadership election was triggered when previous Labour leader Ed
Miliband resigned after May’s general election defeat by Prime Minister
David Cameron’s Conservatives. The party has not held power since 2010.
As well as Corbyn, there are three other, more centrist, candidates —
Andy Burnham and Yvette Cooper — both slick former ministers under
Blair and Gordon Brown — plus backbench MP Liz Kendall.
Kendall is urging voters to support anyone but Corbyn, telling BBC
radio: “I don’t want to see Labour submit our resignation letter to the
British people as a serious party of government.”
Cooper, meanwhile, has said Corbyn offers only “old solutions to old problems”.
Britain’s two main left-leaning newspapers, The Guardian and the
Daily Mirror, came out in favour of Cooper and Burnham respectively
Friday.
But even The Guardian noted that all three mainstream candidates had
“failed to inspire, coming across to too many members as a triple-headed
embodiment of the well-dressed, smooth-talking Westminster class.”
There are also concerns about the integrity of the vote after hundreds of non-Labour supporters registered to take part.
Labour has rejected applications from around 1,200 members or backers
of other parties who sought to join it as registered supporters for
just £3 ($5, four euros) and take part in the ballot.
Several Labour MPs who oppose Corbyn have said the race should be
rerun due to concerns that the result could be distorted by
infiltration.
Corbyn has drawn support from a range of voters from young
metropolitan professionals disaffected with a Westminster elite seen as
out of touch to trade unions, the bedrock of traditional Labour support.
While bookmakers’ odds and several opinion polls suggest he will win,
the election is being held under a system allowing voters to rank
candidates in order of preference, making the outcome harder to predict.
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