Western Mail

I’ll rejoin fray soon, says Diane Abbott

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DIANE Abbott has said she is “still standing” and hopes to return to the political front line soon, after Jeremy Corbyn appointed a Labour colleague to fill in as shadow home secretary while she is off work due to illness.

Ms Abbott pulled out of two high-profile General Election events on Tuesday, and Mr Corbyn announced on the eve of polling that shadow home affairs spokeswoma­n Lyn Brown is to stand in for her.

Shadow cabinet colleague Barry Gardiner said she had been diagnosed with a longterm condition which may have played a part in below-par interview performanc­es during the election campaign.

There was no immediate response from Ms Abbott’s office and the Labour Party declined to discuss details of her condition.

But in a cheery message on Twitter, Ms Abbott broke her silence to say: “Touched by all the messages of support. Still standing! Will rejoin the fray soon. Vote Labour!”

It is understood that the condition affecting the 63-year-old MP for Hackney North and Stoke Newington would not prevent her eventual return to work once she has recovered.

Close Corbyn ally Ms Abbott has come under relentless fire from Conservati­ves following an interview with LBC radio in which she forgot figures for Labour’s police funding plans, and an appearance on Sky News when she struggled to discuss details of a security report.

She was replaced by shadow foreign secretary Emily Thornberry for a debate on BBC Radio 4’s Woman’s Hour and a hustings organised by the London Evening Standard on Tuesday.

Mr Corbyn yesterday asked Ms Brown to stand in for her during her period of ill-health.

West Ham MP Ms Brown was among a number of shadow ministers who quit the front bench last year, saying that Labour needed a new leader “for the good of the party and the country”. However, she returned to Ms Abbott’s home affairs team three months later as shadow minister for policing.

Mr Gardiner said he had been told by party officials that the shadow home secretary was suffering from a long-term illness.

“Diane is clearly not well and I understand that it is a condition which has been diagnosed and is long term,” the shadow internatio­nal trade secretary told TalkRadio presenter Julia Hartley-Brewer.

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