At tomorrow’s meeting of the national executive committee (NEC),
will confirm that will not be allowed to stand
as a Labour candidate at the next general election. The Labour
leader will do this by proposing a motion that will
see the NEC agree not to endorse Corbyn as a Labour
candidate at the next election. Starmer’s majority on the
NEC means that the motion is expected to pass. The motion,
seconded by national campaign coordinator , asserts that "the
Labour Party's interests, and its political interests at the next
general election, are not well served by Mr Corbyn running as a
Labour Party candidate". A senior Labour source said: “Keir
Starmer has made clear that won’t be a Labour candidate
at the next general election. The Labour Party now is
unrecognisable from the one that lost in 2019. Tuesday’s vote
will confirm this and ensure we can focus on our five missions to
build a better Britain.”
Commenting on the news, a Momentum spokesperson said: "We utterly
condemn this venal and duplicitous act from , which further divides the
Labour Party and insults the millions of people inspired by
Jeremy Corbyn’s leadership." The spokesperson described the
Labour leader as "drunk on his own power", saying: "The
rationale given is pathetic and fails to cover up the patently
factional motivation. Keir’s paper suggests this blocking is
necessary for Labour’s electoral prospects – that will come as a
surprise to Jeremy’s constituents, who have elected him
ten times with massive majorities." They argued: "Keir is
doing this because he knows Jeremy would wipe the floor in any
selection contest."
The Jewish Labour Movement expressed hope that the
motion would pass, saying: " has shown no contrition or
responsibility for the antisemitism which was rampant on his
watch, which led to [the EHRC] finding Labour broke equalities
law. 's firm leadership on this will
only win votes for Labour."
This news is a formalisation of an earlier announcement that the former
Labour leader would not be allowed to stand, which was
revealed by Starmer last month. Following his speech on the
Equality and Human Rights Commission’s announcement that it had
concluded its monitoring of Labour – which began after the
equality regulator’s investigation into allegations of
antisemitism within the party – Starmer said: “What I said about
the party changing I meant, and we are not going back, and that
is why will not stand as a Labour
candidate.” Responding to the news at the time, Corbyn said
Starmer’s announcement constituted a “flagrant attack on the
democratic rights of Islington North Labour Party members”.
NEC member Mish Rahman, who was elected with Momentum
backing, has stated that he will not be
supporting the motion at tomorrow's meeting, commenting: "I
believe in a broad church Labour Party where members should
choose their candidates. Now is not the time for the party to
turn inwards."