The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Labour rival claims Corbyn allowing ‘bullying culture’

Smith says he has received death threats during campaign

- BY DAVID HUGHES

Jeremy Corbyn has been accused of allowing a “culture of bullying” to take hold within Labour and was compared to Sports Direct boss Mike Ashley by his leadership rival.

Owen Smith said “something had gone badly wrong” since Mr Corbyn took charge amid fresh claims of abuse being directed at critics of the leader by activists.

Mr Corbyn insisted he is not a bully and said he was “disappoint­ed” at the claims made against him, which included a suggestion he threatened to ring the father of a critically MP in order to put pressure on him. Former shadow cabinet minister Mr Smith

“It’s not what you should be expecting in the Labour Party”

warned the party could be “destroyed” and “consigned to history” unless it could unite.

He said he had received death threats and the problem of abuse had not been there before Mr Corbyn’s leadership win.

He accepted he had “never been bullied by Jeremy” personally but “under his leadership, there has been a culture of bullying, I fear”.

He added: “Jeremy, of course, always says that he doesn’t condone it but somehow under his leadership – we can’t deny the facts that this wasn’t something that we saw in the Labour Party before Jeremy Corbyn became leader – and it’s now become commonplac­e in the Labour Party. So something has gone badly wrong under his watch.”

Mr Smith also hit out at the suggestion Labour MPs will face having to be re-selected to stand in the 2020 general election – a move which could allow Mr Corbyn’s supporters in the grassroots to oust critics.

He said: “It’s not kinder and gentler, is it, if you are the boss of an organisati­on and the workers are unhappy, to threaten to give them the sack. It’s the sort of thing you might see at Sports Direct but it’s not what you should be expecting in the Labour Party.”

The party leader dismissed concerns about the prospect of re- selection hearings, insisting “it is not Armageddon” and was simply the result of planned boundary changes as part of the Government’s efforts to cut the number of Commons seats from 650 to 600. “There will be a process by which MPs will be automatica­lly short-listed for the new constituen­cies because they are sitting MPs and because they have a geographic­al interest in the new constituen­cy,” he said.

It was up to local constituen­cies to decide whether they then wanted an open selection process.

Mr Corbyn is favourite to win the postal ballot of Labour’s members – whose ranks he said have swelled to more than 500,000 – as well as the 183,000 people who signed up this week as registered supporters and the affiliated supporters in the unions.

Addressing allegation­s of abuse from former leadership contender Angela Eagle and party whip Conor McGinn, he said: “I wish some of my colleagues would concentrat­e on political issues. I regret the language that’s been used, by all of them. I don’t do any abuse, I don’t do any bullying, I don’t allow it to be done anywhere to do with any of my campaign teams and I’m very surprised and very disappoint­ed they should say that, because politics has to be about bringing people in.”

His comments follow an extraordin­ary claim from Mr McGinn, who said Mr Corbyn considered calling his father – a Sinn Fein councillor – in an effort to “bully” him following critical comments the MP made in a magazine interview. Mr Corbyn’s office dismissed the allegation as “untrue” but St Helens North MP Mr McGinn accused the party leader of hypocrisy for talking about a “kinder, gentler politics” when “he had proposed using my family against me”.

 ??  ?? CONTEST: Jeremy Corbyn, left, is favourite to win the leadership campaign over his rival, former shadow cabinet minister Owen Smith
CONTEST: Jeremy Corbyn, left, is favourite to win the leadership campaign over his rival, former shadow cabinet minister Owen Smith

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