In
Right-wing Putsch, UK Labour MPs Deliver
Overwhelming Anti-Corbyn Vote
By Julie
Hyland
June 30,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "WSWS"-
Fully
81 percent of the parliamentary Labour Party (PLP)
supported Tuesday’s motion of no-confidence in
leader Jeremy Corbyn. Just 40 Labour MPs voted
against the motion, with 172 in favour. Thirteen did
not vote at all and there were four spoilt ballots.
The
extraordinary scale of the right-wing coup, which
had already seen Corbyn lose most of his shadow
cabinet in a series of timed resignations, was
intended to force the Labour leader to resign. But
in a statement put out moments after the result,
Corbyn said that he had been elected “by 60 percent
of Labour members and supporters” only last
September, and “I will not betray them by
resigning.”
The
no-confidence motion, he said, has “no
constitutional legitimacy.”
Corbyn is
correct in that the motion is non-binding and there
are no constitutional provisions in Labour’s
rulebook for a leader to stand down in the event of
such a vote. But his opponents are not merely
indifferent, but viciously opposed to party
democracy. They aim to overturn the result of last
September’s election, which saw Corbyn decisively
win the leadership on a ticket of opposing austerity
and war.
These
events shatter Corbyn’s claim that the party can be
“reclaimed” for working people. They make clear that
Labour is a right-wing party of the state, deeply
hostile to the working class and even to its own
membership.
The seismic
shock of last Thursday’s referendum vote in favour
of Britain quitting its membership of the European
Union has provided the trigger for these moves. With
the contest for the Conservative Party leadership
opening today and a snap general election possible
in the autumn, the PLP clique that controls the
Labour Party is acting in concert with the highest
levels of the state.
Their
motivation is not their professed concern that
Corbyn could not win a general election, but their
fear that he very well might. Under conditions of
the gravest crisis for Britain’s ruling elite since
the Second World War, the bourgeoisie will not
tolerate a potential prime minister professing an
anti-austerity, anti-militarist agenda. They want to
ensure that Labour—the main political obstacle to
socialism in Britain for more than a century—is
completely reliable in carrying through the
onslaught against the working class now being
prepared.
On June 13,
10 days before the EU referendum, the
Telegraph’s political correspondent, Ben
Riley-Smith, set out precisely the scenario that has
now unfolded. “Labour rebels,” he wrote, were
preparing to topple Corbyn after the referendum in a
24-hour media “blitz.”
“By fanning
the flames with front bench resignations and public
criticism, they think the signatures needed to
trigger a leadership race can be gathered within a
day,” he said.
Within
hours of the referendum result, by midday Friday,
Dame Margaret Hodge and Ann Coffey MP had submitted
the no-confidence motion against Corbyn. This was
followed early Sunday morning by Shadow Foreign
Secretary Hilary Benn informing Corbyn that he had
no confidence in his leadership, leading to his
sacking.
Beginning
Monday morning, the wave of resignations by shadow
cabinet MPs was underway. Charging that Corbyn had
not done enough to ensure a Remain vote in the
referendum—despite 64 percent of Labour supporters
backing staying in the EU—more than 50 resigned
their posts in less than 48 hours. Such was the
febrile atmosphere in the PLP that there were wild
and false allegations that Corbyn had personally
voted to leave the EU.
Late
Monday, the Financial Times demanded that
the party “now act to remove Jeremy Corbyn.”
Regardless of party rules and members’ desires, the
PLP must “press ahead” and “spell out to the whole
Labour movement the consequence of the false path
the party has embarked upon.”
On Tuesday
morning, the pro-Labour Daily Mirror
led its front page with a call for Corbyn to “step
down for the good of the party and the country.”
Corbyn was
left to frantically seek replacements for the
resigned shadow cabinet ministers, but he could not
command sufficient support to fill the vacancies.
Two members of his newly reshuffled shadow cabinet,
Rachael Maskell and Rob Marris, abstained in the
no-confidence motion.
Ian Murray,
former shadow Scottish secretary, is among those who
quit the front benches. He is Labour’s sole Scottish
MP after the party was all but wiped out in last
year’s general election. Scottish Labour leader
Kezia Dugdale joined the calls for Corbyn to quit,
and Lord Foulkes, chairman of the Scottish PLP, said
no Scottish politician would be prepared to sit in a
Corbyn-led shadow cabinet.
These moves
are deeply unpopular. More than 224,000 people have
so far signed an online petition defending Corbyn.
On Monday night, 10,000 protested in Parliament
Square in support of the Labour leader. But
right-wing Blairites have lined up to insist that
this support—which they deride as consisting of
“Trotskyites” and “Stalinists”—is illegitimate.
Alistair
Campbell, Tony Blair’s former spin doctor, said that
Labour had become a Corbynite “sect” and a “cult,”
made up of supporters of hard-left parties. Campbell
called on those wanting to oust Corbyn to sign up as
Labour supporters in preparation for a leadership
challenge. A campaign, #SavingLabour, has been set
up to recruit new members on this basis.
Former
shadow business secretary Angela Eagle is today
expected to announce her challenge to Corbyn’s
leadership if he does not resign. Her candidacy,
some on the right hope, would rally the majority of
the PLP and effectively block Corbyn from even
running in a leadership contest, as he does not have
the support of the 50 MPs required for placement on
the ballot. Corbyn’s supporters say that this is
also unconstitutional, because, as serving leader,
he automatically has the right to be on the ballot.
So far,
Corbyn seems to retain the backing of the major
trade unions, which are Labour’s main financial
base. Len McCluskey, leader of the Unite union, the
single largest donor, said that the behaviour of the
PLP was “extraordinary” and that “if anyone wants to
change the Labour leadership, they must do it openly
and democratically through an election, not through
resignations and pointless posturing.”
But such
statements are lukewarm. And even if these blatantly
anti-democratic moves fail and Corbyn is able to
run, the PLP has made clear they will not serve
under him if he wins again.
Hence the
open calls for a split by the right. Former Home
Secretary David Blunkett said Corbyn’s supporters
should leave Labour and “set up their own party with
Momentum,” the “grassroots” organisation set up to
support Corbyn after his leadership victory.
Behind such
demands, preparations are being made for a “national
unity” government. Writing in the Telegraph,
John McTernan indicated what is being discussed
behind the scenes. The issue of EU membership had
split the country and all the parties, he wrote,
requiring a “government capable of rising to the
challenges the country faces.” The solution was a
“grand coalition” along German lines.
The ideal
would be to take the “ultra-left rump of the Labour
Party” around Corbyn and “demerge them into a
separate party.”
The
Conservative party could then be split into “pro-
and anti-Brexit camps.” This would see “Tory
modernisers” join with the majority of Labour MPs in
a “progressive party of the radical centre” that
could incorporate the remaining Liberal Democrats
into an “opposition of national unity.”
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