The Independent

Labour MPs to sidestep Corbyn and back third runway at Heathrow

- ROB MERRICK DEPUTY POLITICAL EDITOR

Rebel Labour MPs plan to try to bounce their party into backing a third runway at Heathrow Airport, even without the support of Jeremy Corbyn. They will call a vote of all Labour MPs and peers on an aviation report drawn up by a group of backbenche­rs who sit on the Parliament­ary Labour Party (PLP) transport committee.

The report is said to endorse a third runway, ahead of the long-delayed Government announceme­nt on whether to expand Heathrow or Gatwick, expected within weeks. Gavin Shuker, the Luton South MP who

chairs the transport committee, said he was deeply frustrated by Mr Corbyn’s failure to set out Labour’s position.

The leader’s key ally, shadow Chancellor John McDonnell, has a west London seat under the Heathrow flight path and has long been opposed to a new runway there. If the tactic of forcing the vote works, it could be copied on other key policy areas, when reports are completed by the Labour committees shadowing other government department­s.

Mr Shuker told the BBC: “On a number of key issues, on Syria, on Trident and otherwise, we have dodged the question the people have put to us about where we stand. You can’t just keep on going through the process of free votes and abstention­s.

“People don’t know what we stand for and, if there isn’t going to be clear leadership on these issues, I don’t think that anyone should be surprised that – within the rules of the Labour party – we’re going to utilise those to make sure that we have a clear position.” Most of the PLP committees are chaired by antiCorbyn MPs, including former frontbench­ers Chris Leslie, Caroline Flint, Tristram Hunt, John Woodcock and Emma Reynolds.

This month, it emerged that the Prime Minister Theresa May could seek to resolve her Heathrow headache through a “potential waiving of collective responsibi­lity” – a free vote for her MPs.

Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson and Education Secretary Justine Greening are among opponents of expanding Heathrow. Last year, the Davies Commission recommende­d the building of a third runway at Heathrow, but the Government announced further investigat­ion into noise, pollution and compensati­on before a decision.

David Cameron was expected to announce which project would get the go-ahead after the EU referendum, but his resignatio­n following the Brexit victory has left the decision for his successor, Ms May. Labour MPs and peers meet every Monday evening when Parliament is sitting, making it possible that the Heathrow vote will be staged before that Government announceme­nt.

 ??  ?? The party has failed to set out a clear policy on Heathrow expansion, its MPs say (Getty)
The party has failed to set out a clear policy on Heathrow expansion, its MPs say (Getty)

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