- Sputnik International
World
Get the latest news from around the world, live coverage, off-beat stories, features and analysis.

Labour May Turn Into UK Version of Democrats at Best After Corbyn's Departure - Ex-Member

© AP Photo / Matt DunhamJeremy Corbyn (left) and Keir Starmer
Jeremy Corbyn (left) and Keir Starmer - Sputnik International
Subscribe
LONDON (Sputnik) - The United Kingdom’s Labour is currently having no one of "real calibre" at its helm and risks turning into an ordinary neoliberal party "with a human face" at best after Jeremy Corbyn's departure, according to Chris Williamson, a former Labour member of parliament for Derby North.
"For the first time since we had a socialist as leader within touching distance of power ... and it’s been thrown away. And comprehensively destroyed now. There's nobody of any real calibre, I think, in the Parliamentary Labour Party that has an opportunity, the gravitas to galvanise a movement and build an alternative inside the party", Williamson said.

According to the ex-lawmaker, Corbyn failed to stand up to the consistent smear campaign against him and his vision of the party, which "has been ongoing really from when Jeremy got elected as leader and never stopped." Instead, he had to "continually" apologise.

As a result, Williamson went on, the country has lost a chance for a "very significant re-set of the whole system of public services, the economy and so on."

"The best we can hope for from the Labour party in my opinion is a UK version of the Democrats. So basically neoliberalism with a human face", he argued.
Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn, right and Shadow Foreign Secretary Emily Thornberry answer questions from the media - Sputnik International
Labour Could Enter Financial 'Death Throes' Over Leaked Report Legal Action

The new Labour leadership is unlikely to cause "undue disturbance" to "grotesque levels of inequality" and "wholesale deregulation" of public services, according to the politician.  He did not rule out that there would be "some tinkering perhaps at the edges," but doubted that any fundamental change would follow.

Centre-left Keir Starmer was elected as the new party leader on 4 April, succeeding left-leaning Corbyn. The latter announced his plans to resign back in December after his party suffered the worst election defeat since 1935. During his troubled period in office, he was heavily criticised over claims as to endemic anti-Semitism in party ranks and an arguably convoluted position on Brexit.

Newsfeed
0
To participate in the discussion
log in or register
loader
Chats
Заголовок открываемого материала