Daily Mail

McDonnell: Let’s overthrow Tories

Marxist shadow chancellor ignores Labour’s defeat and urges union militants to march on Parliament

- By Jason Groves Political Editor

JOHN McDonnell has urged union militants to put a million protesters ‘on the streets’ in an attempt to oust Theresa May.

Labour’s shadow chancellor called on Left-wing activists to turn a union-organised march on Parliament next month into a mass protest.

The self-confessed Marxist, who has previously backed ‘insurrecti­on’ against the State, said direct action was needed to engineer the Government’s downfall.

But Tory MPs called his demand ‘bordering on undemocrat­ic’ and accused him of trying to gain power through mob rule.

In a speech to the militant Bakers, Food and Allied Workers Union, Mr McDonnell called for a ‘national demonstrat­ion’ in support of Labour’s election-losing manifesto.

He called for the Trades Union Congress to back an anti-austerity event on July 1, which will end with a march on Parliament, and said the Left needed to ‘keep the momentum going’ to force an early election.

‘We need people doing everything they can to ensure the election comes as early as possible,’ he said. ‘I don’t think an alliance of Tories and the DUP can ever be strong and stable.’

He added: ‘What we need now is the TUC mobilised, every union mobilised … get out on the streets.

‘Just think, if the TUC put out that call that we want a million on the streets of London in two weeks’ time.’

Conservati­ve MP Jacob Rees-Mogg said: ‘This is the hard-Left in action. We have just had an election and the result should be respected by all sides. But the hard-Left has never had much time for elections.

‘There is something rather bullying about having a march on Parliament in order to force the hand of MPs. It is bordering on undemocrat­ic.

‘The people have decided they do not want a Labour government and I think we should be concerned that a man who is effectivel­y the deputy leader of the opposition is urging people to take to the streets to try to overturn that.’

Tory Andrew Bridgen said Labour appeared to be trying to gain power through ‘mob rule on the streets’. Labour lost last week’s election, securing just 262 seats compared to the Conservati­ves’ 318.

But Mr McDonnell told the Communist Morning Star newspaper that Mrs May had no right to govern. He said: ‘I don’t think this government is a legitimate government. It hasn’t got an overall majority.’

And he suggested Labour should now be able to push through its own manifesto in Parliament. ‘What I’m saying to people is they should be pressing now, because nobody won this election,’ he said.

‘The Labour Party should have the same right to put policies forward in Parliament, to be properly debated and voted upon and to legislate as well.’

Sam Fairbairn, of anti-austerity group the People’s Assembly, said ‘street mobilisati­ons’ could help to bring down Mrs May. He added: ‘We say to the millions of people who engaged in politics for the first time that they can be part of a mass movement for change, deepening the crisis for Theresa May. Her days are numbered.’

Mr McDonnell has a history of encouragin­g militants to take to the streets.

In a speech in 2012 he warned that the Left could only win power by resorting to industrial action and ‘insurrecti­on’.

‘The three methods we use (are) the ballot box, industrial action, what we used to call insurrecti­on but we now politely call direct action,’ he said.

‘The ballot box will not become available to us unless we force the issue through industrial action and through direct action.’

TWO days after flames engulfed Grenfell Tower, and as the grim task of picking through the rubble to identify bodies begins, the list of questions for council bureaucrat­s, contractor­s and ministers grows ever longer.

Hour after hour yesterday, more disturbing evidence emerged of catastroph­ic failures which cost the lives of up to 100 people.

Yes, it is too soon for firm conclusion­s about the cause of the blaze – something Jeremy Corbyn should have considered when he cynically blamed spending cuts before it was even extinguish­ed.

But the more we learn of this tragedy, the more it appears that the blame lies not with money but staggering incompeten­ce and misguided climate change targets.

Clearly, the public inquiry – rightly ordered yesterday by Theresa May – must examine why an £8.6million refit used flammable plastic cladding which turned a safe building into a tinder box overnight.

Was it, as official documents suggest, an attempt to slash greenhouse gas emissions? Even then, why wasn’t a fireproof alternativ­e used – or one which didn’t pump out clouds of cyanide when set ablaze?

Why didn’t anyone fit life-saving sprinkler systems costing as little as £200,000? And why on Earth were residents told to stay inside, condemning many to death?

Urgent answers are needed, not least to ensure the safety of other tower blocks, but also for families who have lost loved ones. For their sake, the inquiry must not – as have so many others – drag on for years.

Meanwhile, as politician­s posture, the Mail pays tribute to the public’s extraordin­ary generosity in donating vast sums of money, clothes and possession­s to those who have lost everything.

 ??  ?? Firebrand: John McDonnell speaks at a Left-wing rally
Firebrand: John McDonnell speaks at a Left-wing rally
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