The Labour Party is facing a rebellion at the heart
of parliament, with a series of high profile resignations sending the
party into turmoil. But what does it all mean? Since 23 MPs have now
left the Shadow Cabinet, at the time of writing
(the remaining members of the original Shadow Cabinet are
Jeremy Corbyn, Tom Watson, Rosie Winterton, John McDonnell, Andy
Burnham, Emily Thornberry, Jon Trickett and Diane Abbott), not all of
the Shadow Cabinet members who have left will be listed below – however
the most important will be detailed.
Hilary Benn
Hilary
Benn was sacked by Corbyn after Benn told Corbyn that he had no
confidence in his leadership. He fundamentally disagreed with Corbyn on
foreign policy and had voted to authorise bombing on Daesh in Syria back
in December after being the closing speaker for the Opposition in the
preceding debate whilst Corbyn had opened for the Opposition. Corbyn is
fundamentally an anti-war politician, having been the national chair of
Stop the War Coalition, though he has named three justified conflicts
(the most recent being the role of UN peacekeepers in the 1999 East
Timor crisis). Corbyn has also said that stopping war and violence is
his key personal objective.
Whilst Labour had
seemed relatively unified on domestic policy and split on foreign
policy, the sacking of Benn shows that this situation is no longer
working for the Labour Party (if, indeed, if ever did work). Benn, since
his sacking, has focused on Corbyn being a poor leader, rather than
their foreign policy differences, however. Regardless, Emily Thornberry,
who has been named the new Shadow Foreign Secretary, agrees with Corbyn
on issues such as Trident, which will prove very important if Corbyn
remains leader of the Labour Party when the Trident vote is held.
Benn’s
sacking shows that it will be nearly impossible for Corbyn to continue
holding various different wings of the party together in a Cabinet. The
patience of even the most conciliatory moderates in the party has run
out (with the exception of Andy Burnham and possibly Rosie Winterton; it
is difficult to see how Watson, as Deputy Leader, could’ve resigned
even if he had wanted to).
Because Benn was the
Shadow Foreign Secretary, one of the four Shadow Great Offices of State,
this is probably the most important exit from the Shadow Cabinet.
However, it would not have amounted to much if the avalanche of
resignations hadn’t followed after it.
Heidi Alexander
Heidi
Alexander was the Shadow Health Secretary before she resigned. She was
the Shadow Secretary of State for Education and had been elected as the
MP for Lewisham East in 2010. Her Shadow Cabinet post under Corbyn was
her first. Paul Mason has claimed, after her resignation, that Alexander
tried to get Corbyn to blame the junior doctors for the junior doctors’
crisis; a claim she firmly denied. She doesn’t, however, participate in
picket lines as the Labour leadership frequently do and she even once
successfully persuaded John McDonnell not to participate in a picket
line of striking junior doctors. Instead of protesting with junior
doctors, she pressed for a compromise during the crisis which could’ve
averted the strike.
She had supported Andy
Burnham’s 2010 and 2015 leadership campaigns. Thus, if crude statements
about Labour factions are going to be made, she is probably part of the
soft left wing of the Labour Party. The soft left (including Andy
Burnham’s 2015 leadership campaign as well as Andy Burnham currently)
has been broadly supportive of Corbyn’s leadership. However, Alexander’s
resignation clearly shows that this previous tentative support is now
all but annulled. Indeed, Alexander’s resignation is a clear
demonstration that most of the Parliamentary Labour Party (PLP) will not
put up with Corbyn’s ‘politics of protest’ any longer. They view him as
not wanting to get Labour into power and create electable policies,
instead preferring to constantly protest against the Tories and
diametrically oppose them on virtually everything they do without
bothering to find workable cross-party solutions, or even broad-based
Labour solutions, to problems.
Lucy Powell
Lucy
Powell was the Shadow Secretary of State for Education before she
resigned. She was a close ally of Ed Miliband and said that she had
‘never, ever met or spoken to’ Mr Corbyn since she became an MP – yet
she was appointed to, and accepted her appointment to, the Shadow
Cabinet in 2015. During her time as Shadow Education Secretary, she
argued in favour of taking free schools and academies back into local
authority control. Again, her resignation clearly suggests that the
broader left of the PLP has lost its tolerance for Jeremy Corbyn.
Pat Glass is her replacement as Shadow Education Secretary (appointed Monday 27 June).
Glass says
that ‘she was never a Jeremy Corbyn supporter when he was running for
the leadership’, but she has drawn controversy for calling an elector ‘a
horrible racist’. She also suggested that voters shouldn’t bother with
persuading their grandfathers to vote remain because ‘the problem is
older white men’. One can’t help but feel that Corbyn is having to
scrape the barrel due to resignations from MPs who had been broadly
supportive of him previously – there are many Labour MPs who don’t make
these kinds of offensive statements to voters, but virtually all of them
either ruled themselves out of the 2015 Shadow Cabinet or have left the
2016 Shadow Cabinet.
However, as of Wednesday 29
June, Pat Glass has resigned. Resigning only two days after being
appointed, this is probably the shortest-ever tenure of a Shadow Cabinet
member and demonstrates that Corbyn can't really trust any 'moderates'
in the party to join his Shadow Cabinet and that the only long-term
solution to the issue if Corbyn remains in charge of Labour (and this
seems likely, at the moment) is surely to start MP deselections.
Ian Murray
Ian
Murray is Labour’s only Scottish MP. He has (after resigning) said that
Scottish Labour supports Sturgeon on the EU in protecting Scotland’s
jobs and economy against what he describes as the Conservatives’
‘utterly dreadful decision to put their party first before the country’.
This is a very embarrassing resignation for Corbyn, since it means he
may have to appoint a non-Scottish MP as Shadow Secretary for Scotland.
However, it has also been suggested that Corbyn could appoint a Labour
MSP to the post (there is nothing stopping him from doing this). This
would be a rather novel move and it would be interesting if this idea is
used by future governments – with a member of the UK executive being
also a member of a devolved legislature rather than the UK legislature. However, this does mean that the Shadow Secretary for Scotland would be
unable to make responses to the Secretary for Scotland in Parliament.
Overall, however, this resignation only added to Corbyn’s problems.
Lisa Nandy
She’s viewed as a solid lefty in the party and Owen Jones, left-wing journalist for The Guardian,
considered backing her after Ed Miliband’s resignation. She was the
Shadow Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change. Her resignation
shows that even those who are ideologically close to Corbyn in the PLP
may not necessarily support him. Lisa Nandy has been floated as a
potential leadership candidate due to her support on the left of the
party, and she could prove a serious thorn in Corbyn’s side in the
future.
Owen Smith
Owen
Smith is a staunch party loyalist, on the same level as Andy Burnham, so
his resignation was very significant indeed. This shows that some
people whose main priority seems to be holding the party together (and
spending the majority of time attacking the Tories, rather than each
other) believe that Corbyn is the one splitting it apart, not the
resigners from the Shadow Cabinet. So Smith, a noted unifier, decided to
join the resigners. Corbyn has often relied on Labour members and MPs
calling for party unity to support his leadership from a non-factional
perspective. Owen Smith’s resignation makes this far more difficult.
Angela Eagle
Angela
Eagle’s resignation was particularly important of all the resignations.
As Shadow First Secretary of State, she was the second-in-command of
the PLP. She stood in for Corbyn when Cameron was away at PMQs, making a
number of impressive performances – including exploiting Tory splits on
the EU before the referendum, which went down well in the media. Again,
her resignation is a clear illustration of how badly Corbyn has lost
support in the soft left areas of the party. She also has been floated
as a possible leadership candidate, so much has she impressed Labour
moderates. During her time as Shadow First Secretary of State and Shadow
Business Secretary, she has sometimes refused to directly praise Jeremy
Corbyn, however she has focused on attacking the Tories and has
certainly been a key unifier. Apparently she spent over 24 hours trying
to contact Corbyn’s office before she resigned but got no response. She
has also, since resigning, decried Corbyn for refusing to effectively
respond to any criticisms she has made of him.
Her
exit from the Shadow Cabinet should’ve prompted Corbyn’s resignation,
but Corbyn has been too stubborn to be moved, knowing that his shadow
ministers (even if they have Labour interests at heart) are only
resigning en masse to try to remove him from the ballot of the next
leadership election. For the sake of his own position, Corbyn can afford
to wait.
Angela may run in a leadership race,
according to breaking reports. However, going from fourth in a deputy
leader election to beating Corbyn in a leadership election in just 10
months might be a step too far for the Wallasey MP.
Other Shadow Ministers
Not
many of the shadow ministers who don’t attend Shadow Cabinet are
particularly well-known, however Stephen Kinnock, son of Labour leader
Neil Kinnock who battled against Militant entryists in the 80s and 90s
and perhaps viewed as on the soft left of the party, was one of the more
notable resigners. He represents Aberavon and has battled for his
constituents in the steel crisis, fighting for government intervention
to save the Port Talbot steelworks. Given that this is calling for a
heavier government hand in the steel industry and even an element of
protectionism to prevent Chinese steel dumping, this has placed Kinnock
somewhat close to Corbyn’s views on this issue – thus, it is notable
that he has resigned despite Corbyn’s Labour’s support of #SaveOurSteel.
Kinnock was the Parliamentary Private Secretary to Angela Eagle, the
former Shadow Secretary of State for Business, Innovation and Skills and
Shadow First Secretary of State. He resigned before she did.
Another
well-known junior shadow minister who resigned is Jess Phillips, the
member for Birmingham Yardley. She was a parliamentary private secretary
to Shadow Education Minister Lucy Powell. She opposed debates in
Parliament in honour of International Men’s Day, suggesting that it was
women who weren’t represented well enough anyway, not men, and she has
spoken out sharply against sexist abuse that has been made at her. In an
interview with Owen Jones, she said that she wouldn’t stab Corbyn in
the back, but in the front (and only if he wasn’t helping the Labour
movement), and she has clearly done this, with an honest,
straightforward but respectful (as far as one can be respectful when
metaphorically stabbing someone) resignation letter.
The new
shadow education secretary has also revealed that she will not be
seeking re-election, causing more selection headaches for the
leadership.
What happens now?
We
now essentially have two Shadow Cabinets in exile. The former being a
group completely intolerant of Corbyn (thus, generally speaking, from
the centre of the party). This group includes Cooper, Kendall, Reeves,
Harman, Leslie etc. The latter being a group which could only tolerate
him for slightly under a year (thus, generally speaking, from the soft
left of the party). This group includes Benn, the Eagles, Owen Smith,
Powell, Heidi Alexander etc.
Since it seems that
Corbyn will not resign due to Shadow Cabinet resignations, because there
are just about enough pro-Corbyn MPs in the party to fill the Shadow
Cabinet, even if they are clearly not the best candidates for their
roles, it is up to the centre (or, ‘right’) and soft left of the party
to find a candidate who can beat Corbyn in a leadership election and who
can make significant progress to solving Labour’s myriad of existential
problems. This includes:
- An appropriate response to Brexit which can attract metropolitan Labour Remainers and working-class Labour Leavers
- A
stance on immigration (taking into account the (perhaps unlikely)
possibility of ending free movement via Brexit) which, again, can hold
Labour’s more socially conservative working-class and more socially
liberal metropolitan supporters together. But equally, whilst this
policy should not ignore anti-immigration sentiment as Corbyn’s approach
has seemed to do, it should not be an unconvincing fudge which pleases
no-one like Miliband’s policy
- A radical
reforming stance on the economy (with big, new, perhaps centrist, ideas)
but one which is more fiscally credible than Miliband-Corbyn’s ‘capital
account deficit and current account balance/surplus’ policy – or, at
least, someone who can clearly communicate better than Ed and Jeremy and
can convince people that this really is fiscally credible
They
also need someone who can look like a leader – this will be very
subjective indeed, but someone who can communicate with the media rather
than attack them would be a good sign of someone who the media could
portray as a good leader. The fact is that we do have to take the
media’s response into account when choosing a leader, because we will be
largely relying on the media to communicate our message in a favourable
manner. Attacking them simply doesn’t work, as Corbyn has demonstrably
proven.
Corbyn’s strategy from now on will be to
consolidate his power further by using his considerable support from the
membership (who remain sovereign in the Labour Party). A leadership
election between him and a more moderate candidate could be very close
indeed, if he wins then the only way he can ensure he has a supportive
PLP and a perhaps credible left-wing Shadow Cabinet is by starting MP
deselections. This is, of course, a last resort, but Corbyn has no
choice after essentially losing two unity Shadow Cabinets and losing a
vote of no confidence by an unprecedented 172-40. The PLP has run out of
patience for Corbyn, and if Corbyn wins the leadership election then he
will be quite right to have lost patience with the PLP.
If
Corbyn does win the leadership election, then it is anyone’s guess what
the rest of the PLP will do. Mass defections to Farron’s Lib Dems will
certainly be on the cards, as will creating a new party SDP-style. They
also seem to be already seeking to form a ‘proper’ Official Opposition
(one which represents the majority of Labour MPs), but how successful
they are in that completely relies on Speaker John Bercow’s
receptiveness to the idea. Still, it was interesting that in response to
Cameron’s EU statement on Monday, so many of Labour heavyweights such
as Harriet Harman, Yvette Cooper and Hilary Benn (who received a
particularly loud cheer) made speeches. Perhaps making a point that the
Labour frontbench does not really represent the Labour party as a whole. Cameron seemed to help them, not talking about the Labour crisis
directly, but instead thanking individuals for campaigning with him to
make a clear, united case to Remain; making implicit digs at Corbyn for
not doing so (and, perhaps, losing the referendum for Remain).