Scottish Daily Mail

Corbyn: I won’t step in to halt the purge of Labour moderates

- By Claire Ellicott and Daniel Martin

JEREMY Corbyn enraged Labour moderates last night by refusing to stop no-confidence votes – just as yet another MP faced deselectio­n.

As he addressed a stormy meeting of backbenche­rs, a spokesman for the Labour leader insisted it was not his place to interfere in the ‘democratic rights’ of the party at a local level.

Rosie Duffield became the latest Labour moderate to be threatened with censure, with a no-confidence vote in Canterbury tomorrow night over accusation­s that she supports pro-Israel groups.

She is the fourth Labour MP to face a vote in recent days after Joan Ryan, chairman of Labour Friends of Israel, Gavin Shuker and Chris Leslie received similar treatment.

Many Labour moderates fear a purge by Corbyn loyalists. On another dramatic day for the party:

Mr Corbyn was confronted by angry MPs who demanded he intervene to defend Miss Duffield;

Union boss Len McCluskey told Labour moderates to ‘quit, go elsewhere’ or back the leader;

Former home secretary David Blunkett told Mr Corbyn to ‘lay off’ Labour MPs and urge his allies to end the ‘witch hunt’.

At the Labour MPs’ meeting last night, Mr Corbyn faced demands to prevent the disciplina­ry meeting against Miss Duffield.

But a spokesman said he would refuse to interfere in the ‘democratic rights’ of any part of the Labour Party. Two Labour MPs stormed out after Mr Corbyn said he would not intervene.

Speaking afterwards, Labour MP Siobhan McDonagh denounced the leader, saying: ‘Rosie Duffield has been an MP for 18 months. She is a young woman who is facing a disciplina­ry meeting.

‘It is incumbent on all of us who have been round a lot longer to make sure that that meeting is conducted in a proper and respectful way to both the members and to Rosie, and the idea that the leader of our party has no responsibi­lity for that is completely wrong.’

The no-confidence vote will be held tomorrow to debate a motion signed by a number of pro-Palestinia­n Labour supporters.

They accuse Miss Duffield of supporting movements that ‘groundless­ly accuse the party of systematic anti-Semitism’ after she attended a protest against racism in Parliament Square.

Meanwhile, fears of a purge of the moderates were intensifie­d yesterday as Len McCluskey, head of the Unite union, warned rebels to ‘leave and go elsewhere’.

He told the Trades Union Congress there needed to be ‘unity behind our leader, our party’, adding: ‘Those people who don’t want to unite in this great cause... should leave and go elsewhere and let the rest of us fight on.’

Former Home Secretary David Blunkett accused the hard-Left of targeting those whose only failing was to support the state of Israel.

Lord Blunkett said: ‘Any move to deselect MPs that are patently serving their constituen­cy and people that they represent will not only be unacceptab­le to a great swathe of the Labour Party, but will be the greatest possible putoff for the electorate as a whole.

‘Now if an MP is simply not doing the job, not serving their constituen­cies, not holding advice surgeries, that’s a different matter.

‘That isn’t the case with Joan Ryan, Chris Leslie and Gavin Shuker. The argument is we don’t like you being pro-Israel or we don’t like you still defending the achievemen­ts of the last Labour government.’ He added: ‘I wish Jeremy would make it clear that he values his own colleagues.’

Caroline Flint, Labour’s former Europe minister, also urged the party to end talk of threatenin­g some MPs with deselectio­n. She called on the leadership to act against ‘vile people’ who were ‘corrupting the party with racism’.

‘Corrupting the party with racism’

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