The Daily Telegraph

Starmer faces fresh revolt from party in second ceasefire ballot

- By Nick Gutteridge, Ben Riley-smith and Dominic Penna

SIR KEIR STARMER is facing the threat of a fresh revolt from his party as the Commons prepares to vote for a second time on a ceasefire in Gaza.

The Labour leader will have to fight off more unrest among his frontbench­ers and MPS after the SNP pledged to force another ballot on a truce.

It means that he faces another internal battle over Israel at a time when tensions are running high within the party following the disorder in Rochdale.

Sir Keir is facing fierce criticism from the Left after he was forced to suspend two parliament­ary candidates over their anti-israel remarks.

The SNP is set to use one of its opposition days in Parliament to call a debate and vote on a ceasefire in Gaza, which is slated to be held next Wednesday.

Stephen Flynn MP, the Scottish party’s leader, said: “The time for equivocati­ng is over. Rishi Sunak and Sir Keir Starmer must back an immediate ceasefire now.

“The UK Parliament cannot just sit on its hands and do nothing. Internatio­nal pressure is paramount if an immediate ceasefire is to happen and the UK has a moral duty to do its part.”

The move is designed to poke at the wounds within Labour, which is threatenin­g to take dozens of seats off the SNP at the next general election.

Sir Keir was rocked by a rebellion at the last ceasefire vote, losing 10 members of his frontbench who quit.

In total 56 Labour MPS defied his orders to cast their ballots in favour of an immediate truce. While it is unlikely he will lose any more shadow ministers, next week’s vote will once again put Labour’s divisions on display.

It came as Labour admitted that it had been forced to speak to a third politician over the meeting which sparked the anti-semitism crisis currently engulfing the party.

Officials said they had “spoken to” Munsif Dad, a Labour councillor in Hyndburn, about his attendance at a controvers­ial Oct 31 gathering.

It is understood the conversati­on with Mr Dad was about ascertaini­ng what happened at the gathering rather than any specific comments he himself made.

Sir Keir was forced to suspend Azhar Ali, his candidate in Rochdale, on Monday after it emerged he had allegedly made a string of anti-semitic comments at the meeting. Fewer than 24 hours later, Sir Keir had to suspend Graham Jones, who had been selected to contest Hyndburn, Lancs, at the next general election.

At the same gathering, held on October 31, Mr Jones had reportedly referred to “f------ Israel” and said Britons who fight for the Israeli Defence Forces should be “locked up”.

It can be revealed that Labour issued new guidance for the selection of MP hopefuls just a few months ago that tells officials to prioritise diversity.

The guidance, published in October, says that the party’s ruling body can intervene if shortlists of candidates are not considered suitably diverse.

John Healey, the shadow defence secretary, said Labour is “not a party of people who are saints” as he defended Sir Keir’s handling of the crisis.

Mr Healey admitted he could not “guarantee no one connected to the party will say something wrong or unacceptab­le” but said Sir Keir had responded decisively.

In a sign of the public pressure Labour is under an attack poster was put up in the north London constituen­cy of Wes Streeting, the shadow health secretary, attacking its Gaza stance.

Taped to a bus stop near Gants Hill tube station in Ilford, it depicted a box on a ballot paper with a black cross in it alongside the phrase: “Vote for genocide, Vote Labour”.

It came as a new poll showed Labour’s lead over the Tories had already plummeted by seven points in the run-up to the crisis in Rochdale.

The survey by Savanta, conducted in the aftermath of the U-turn on Sir Keir’s £28billion green pledge, put Labour on 41 per cent and the Tories on 29 per cent.

It means the party’s lead is at its narrowest out of every Savanta poll so far this year, while its vote share is at its lowest since June 2023.

 ?? ?? A poster attacking Labour’s stance on the Israel conflict in north London
A poster attacking Labour’s stance on the Israel conflict in north London

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