Long-Bailey has the Momentum
REBECCA LONG-BAILEY has scored a significant boost in her quest to become Labour leader after securing the backing of the Momentum campaign group.
The shadow business secretary – a frontrunner in the race to succeed Jeremy Corbyn – won the overwhelming endorsement of its members in the result of the ballot announced yesterday.
Though the result is not unexpected, the left-winger will now be boosted by the campaigning firepower of the group, which has long supported the outgoing leader.
Shadow education secretary Angela Rayner was also endorsed as deputy leader following the confirmatory ballot of Momentum members.
Ms Long-Bailey said: “Momentum members alongside hundreds of thousands of other Labour members worked day and night across the country to elect a Labour government last December, knocking on millions of doors.
“I am proud and beyond grateful to be backed by an organisation that has revolutionised how we campaign.”
Momentum now plans to run “hundreds” of phone banks across the country and encourage supporters to use apps to make “hundreds of thousands of calls” to members in support of Ms Long-Bailey.
The campaign group said 70.42% of respondents voted in the ballot to approve Ms Long-Bailey, while 52.15% were in favour of supporting Ms Rayner.
There had been some controversy around the vote, however, with the pair being the only candidates in the yes-no question of whether Momentum should endorse them.
Each needed to win 50% of the vote, so Ms Rayner only narrowly won the support in the ballot responded to by 7,395 members. The latest poll in the race put Ms Long-Bailey as winning the five-candidate battle to become leader, edging shadow Brexit secretary Sir Keir Starmer into second place.
The hopefuls are now in the second stage as they seek to make it to the postal ballot of members and supporters.
They must get the support of 5% of local parties or at least three affiliates, including two unions, representing a 5% share of affiliated members by February 14.
The Transport Salaried Staffs’ Association plans to ballot members over whether to support Sir Keir or Ms Long-Bailey.
General secretary Manuel Cortes said both candidates “will make a great leader”.
Meanwhile, Ms Long-Bailey has said she disagrees with the law allowing abortion after 24 weeks on the grounds of disability.
The Salford and Eccles MP said it was her personal view, not a policy position, while a spokesman clarified she “unequivocally supports a woman’s right to choose”.
Ms Long-Bailey’s team was re-iterating her stance yesterday after the comments made to representatives of Salford’s Catholic cathedral during the general election campaign surfaced.