Bloomberg: Seven UK Labour MPs quit party in Brexit split with Corbyn

18 February 2019

Seven Labour politicians quit the UK’s main opposition party as Brexit cracked open the structures that have defined British politics for decades, just six weeks before the U.K. is due to leave the European Union.

At a snap press conference in London, the members of Parliament stood up to explain why they had resigned in protest at Jeremy Corbyn’s leadership of the party. Just five minutes earlier, they’d pressed the button in unison on their resignation emails. Luciana Berger, Chris Leslie, Angela Smith, Gavin Shuker, Mike Gapes, Ann Coffey and Chuka Umunna will now sit in an “Independent Group” they want to become a new force in U.K. politics.

“The Labour party we joined and campaigned for and believed in is no longer today’s Labour Party” Leslie told reporters. “We did everything we could to save it, but it has now been hijacked by the machine politics of the hard left." Various members of the group said party rows over anti-Semitism, foreign policy and a takeover by the hard left fed into their decision to leave.

Though the full implications remain unclear and will be for some time, the split has the potential to complicate Prime Minister Theresa May’s task of getting her deal with Brussels through Parliament. Many in the group said Corbyn’s failure to take a decisive stand against May’s policy and call for a second referendum proved to be the “tipping point.” If more Labour MPs join, pro-EU Tories could be tempted to follow if they feel there’s potential to create a legitimate power in the center of British politics.

As for Labour, the risk is that the party splinters fully, handing a significant electoral advantage to May’s Conservatives. Monday’s development is likely to force Corbyn off the fence on Brexit, with early signs his allies will double down and refuse to back a second referendum on leaving the European Union. [...]

Full article on Bloomberg


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