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CORBYN’S LABOUR PARTY IS A MESS BUT CAN STILL WIN POLL

UK desire for change could see PM Johnson thrown out despite Brexit deal.

- By Robert Hutton

They are divided, unpopular and have been accused by their own former colleagues of racism. But Jeremy Corbyn and his allies in the UK’s Labour Party could yet take power in next month’s general election. After Prime Minister Boris Johnson had a terrible first day campaignin­g on Wednesday, it was Mr Corbyn’s turn on Thursday.

As bad as Mr Corbyn looks on paper, he has a potential path to power. The Conservati­ves have been in office so long that austerity-bitten voters want change. Opinion polls have misjudged the public mood before. Mr Johnson is a gaffe-prone leader who is a divisive figure in the Brexit landscape.

If Mr Corbyn shores up his support in Labour heartlands in northern and central England, and with Mr Johnson viewed increasing­ly with suspicion in Scotland, an unpredicta­ble election could see the prime minister ousted.

The Labour leader himself is a deeply divisive figure in his own tribe. Just this week, his deputy quit and a former Labour member of Parliament urged the country to vote Conservati­ve. The Jewish Chronicle newspaper then ran a front page article describing Mr Corbyn as an anti-Semite.

It was a grim narrative for a political opposition hoping to persuade the country to put it into power on Dec 12.

Labour could be doing so much better.

The Conservati­ves have been in office for nine years, and have been tearing themselves apart over Brexit for the past three. Mr Johnson is now seeking to do something relatively rare for a government in British elections and increase the number of seats his ruling party has in parliament.

Mr Corbyn meanwhile has been calling for an election ever since the last one, in June 2017, put him within striking distance of replacing the Tories as the government. Yet with the campaign now under way, the opinion polls tell a very different story.

After rating close to the Conservati­ves for much of the last two years, Labour goes into the race behind. According to YouGov Plc, it hasn’t polled above 27% in six months. The Conservati­ves are on 36%.

Mr Corbyn, in particular, polls badly. Just 23% of people say they have a positive view of him — against 59% who say they have a negative view. More than half of people who voted Labour in the 2017 election think Mr Corbyn should be replaced as leader.

It’s a view shared privately by many Labour MPs, including some inside his shadow cabinet team. Others, like Ian Austin, have gone so far as to quit the party in protest at his leadership. “I regard myself as proper, decent, traditiona­l Labour,” Mr Austin told the BBC. “I just think Jeremy Corbyn’s not fit to run the country.” Saying people should vote for Mr Johnson instead, he added: “I can’t believe it’s come to this.”

For Mr Austin, the final straw was the rise of anti-Semitism within Labour under Mr Corbyn. On Friday, the Labour leadership insisted it had taken steps to address anti-Semitism.

“In recent times we have seriously improved our processes, in a way that we took too long to do,” party spokeswoma­n Shami Chakrabart­y told BBC Radio. “Because we dragged our feet for so long, there is a trust gap,” she said. Labour has “got to demonstrat­e” over time how serious it is about tackling anti-Semitism.

That’s not what the Jewish Chronicle thinks. Its front page accused Mr Corbyn of “near total inaction” which it said had emboldened anti-Semites in the party. “How can the racist views of a party leader — and the deep fear he inspires among an ethnic minority — not be among the most fundamenta­l of issues?” it asked.

Within Labour, Mr Watson had been the figurehead of internal opposition to Mr Corbyn, staying in place despite attempts to sideline or remove him. Though he said his decision was “personal, not political”, it was notable that his letter of resignatio­n expressed no desire to see either a Labour government or Mr Corbyn as prime minister.

Mr Corbyn’s team is likely to be happy to see the back of Mr Watson, but his departure raises the same question for Labour that Philip Hammond‘s did for the Conservati­ves earlier last week: What does it say about the party that lifelong members no longer see a future representi­ng it in parliament?

After decades in which Labour has aimed for the centre ground of politics, talking about wealth creation as well as public spending, Mr Corbyn has moved it firmly to the left. It’s not simply about taxation and spending. On foreign policy, Mr Corbyn’s position is far outside the consensus of post-war British politics. He’s a critic of Nato, viewing it as a “danger to world peace”.

Yet none of this means Mr Corbyn can’t become prime minister next month. The 2017 election saw him shrug off criticism of his views, and pick up votes where they mattered.

Mr Corbyn’s strategy then included a series of voter-pleasing offers such as extra bank holidays. Those tactics seem to be in play again. On Friday, Labour was to announce a package of measures to improve working conditions for women, included a strategy to reduce the gender pay gap, extra maternity pay and the ability for both women and men to choose working hours that suit them.

For his part, Mr Johnson’s holds a Brexit position that has forced him into a strategy where he risks losing seats in pro-EU cities, the south of England, and Scotland. If he is to retain power and win a majority, Mr Johnson must prevail in northern and central England — but many of these are Labour stronghold­s that the Tories have never won.

When they tried this strategy in 2017, they came within a few thousand votes of losing power entirely. Lifelong Labour voters in these industrial districts may still balk at ditching their tribal allegiance­s in order to vote for the Tories, a party many have spent their lives hating.

There’s another factor counting in Mr Corbyn’s favour. If the Conservati­ves are the largest party after the election but fall short of an overall majority, they will probably find it difficult to form a coalition or even a looser alliance to prop up Mr Johnson.

In another so-called hung parliament, Mr Corbyn would have more potential allies among smaller parties. The Scottish National Party has said they would never work to keep Mr Johnson in office but could help Mr Corbyn in exchange for a referendum on independen­ce for Scotland.

The smaller Liberal Democrats have ruled out supporting a Corbyn government, but party leader Jo Swinson might face the same choice as Austin: Mr Corbyn or Mr Johnson. And as an opponent of Brexit, she couldn’t back the Tory leader.

On foreign policy, Mr Corbyn’s position is far outside the consensus of post-war British politics.

 ??  ?? KEEPING THE FAN CLUB HAPPY: Britain’s main opposition Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn, left, meets supporters in Harlow, north of London, last week.
KEEPING THE FAN CLUB HAPPY: Britain’s main opposition Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn, left, meets supporters in Harlow, north of London, last week.

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