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UK’s warring Labour Party to announce winner of leader race
MPs will also be pressing for greater assurances that Corbyn’s supporters will now not try to remove those of them who have been hostile to his leadership.
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Opponents accuse Momentum of trying to infiltrate the party with far-left activists and say its members have bullied Corbyn opponents.
But he warned that Mr Corbyn must “show those sceptical about his leadership that he has the ability and the ideas to win an election”.
Shadow Welsh Secretary Paul Flynn said Labour’s “gap year from reality is over”, adding: “We must bury futile infighting and unite to defend the NHS, the welfare services and universal education that we created”.
He also offered an olive branch to opposing factions in the Labour Party and said now the results were in the “slate would be wiped clean”.
But for Corbyn’s supporters, his re-election gives them what some describe as their one chance to make Labour a socialist party.
The result sent shock waves across the political world when Corbyn won with a landslide victory.
Reacting to Mr Corbyn’s acceptance speech, Don Valley MP Caroline Flint wrote: “Glad to hear Jeremy #Corbyn talk about our Labour family & uniting the party”.
He said the report on the issue produced by Baroness Chakrabarti had been an “insipid whitewash” and continued: “I have come to the painful conclusion that were Mr Corbyn re-elected …”
Rejecting accusation he was more interested in strengthening the left’s hold on Labour than winning power, Mr Corbyn insisted the enthusiasm which drove his second leadership campaign would boost the party’s hopes in the General Election scheduled for 2020.
But after this resounding victory, Corbyn is highly unlikely to face another challenge before the next general election, due in May 2020.
The group said it wants to help members “understand how their top party officials are attempting to undermine their democratic will”.
The Labour leader received 61.8% of the vote – a larger margin than 12 months ago.
Tens of thousands more new members have flocked to Labour since Corbyn was elected, many of them young and enthusiastic.
“This includes respecting and supporting the elected leader and his team; no more sniping, plotting and corridor coups”.
Mr Corbyn continued: “We have much more in common than that which divides us”.
“We are in a weird situation where Conservative MPs are actually saying that it is bad this is happening within Labour, because no-one is holding the government to account”.
But others, including Hilary Benn, Yvette Cooper and Chuka Umunna are thought likely to focus on their bids to secure the chairmanship of influential parliamentary committees, which will allow them to take prominent roles scrutinising Theresa May’s government from outside Mr Corbyn’s camp. He steered the party from its working class traditions to win broader appeal among areas of the country not traditionally considered as Labour voters. “I am not a leader who will impose things on constituencies”. Certainly, many of his supporters seem convinced that Labour MPs are their enemy, and are less inclined than ever to listen to MPs’ concerns about the party’s electoral prospects.
Corbyn’s first challenge will be to decide how to unify the party, and his decisions on the shadow cabinet will be closely watched.
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“And if Jeremy Corbyn can’t even convince his own leader in Scotland that he can become Prime Minister, how can anybody else take Labour seriously?”