Corbyn backs referendum on Brexit deal after EU election
exodus
To break parliamentary deadlock, deal has to be put to
public vote, Labour leader says
Rowena Mason and Jessica Elgot
Tue 28 May 2019 07.20 BST First published on Mon 27 May 2019
17.31 BST
Jeremy Corbyn has pledged to support a second referendum on
any Brexit deal after the Labour leadership came under overwhelming pressure to
halt the exodus of its remain voters who backed pro-EU parties at the European
elections.
The Labour leader said he was “listening very carefully” to
both sides of the debate after the party fell behind the Liberal Democrats and
also lost ground to the Greens.
Labour’s preference would be a general election but any
Brexit deal “has to be put to a public vote”, he said. Several Labour sources
noted this was a shift from his previous position that a second referendum was
being kept as an option on the table to stop a damaging Tory Brexit.
He later wrote to MPs: “It is clear that the deadlock in
parliament can now only be broken by the issue going back to the people through
a general election or a public vote. We are ready to support a public vote on
any deal.”
Corbyn’s statement, after a day of frantic lobbying from
senior party figures in response to disappointing European election results and
recrimination against his senior advisers, moves the party closer to backing a
people’s vote. But it does not go quite far enough to satisfy the demands of
those in the party who want full backing for a second referendum to be held
without delay – and a commitment that the party will campaign on the remain
side.
John McDonnell, the shadow chancellor, was among the Corbyn
allies who hardened their position, saying on Monday that a second referendum
was inevitable because Tory MPs would not back an election. Asked whether it
was time to support a second referendum in any circumstances, McDonnell said:
“I think it is, yes.”
He added: “Our only option now is to go back to the people
in a referendum and that is the position we’re in now.”
Emily Thornberry, the shadow foreign secretary, Diane
Abbott, the shadow home secretary, Shami Chakrabarti, the shadow attorney
general, and Keir Starmer, the shadow Brexit secretary, also called for a
clearer position in favour of a people’s vote on Brexit in light of the
European election results.
Starmer said a second referendum was the “only way to break
the Brexit impasse” with a “credible leave option and remain”, while Thornberry
said: “I fear we will have no deal and we must be clear it will be a disaster
for the country so we must have a second referendum.”
In the European elections, Labour was left with just 14.6%
of the vote share, and halved its MEPs to 10. Overall, it fell into third place
behind the Brexit party and Liberal Democrats, dropping to fifth position with
no MEPs in Scotland and coming behind Plaid Cymru in Wales for the first time
in a national poll. Mark Drakeford, the Welsh Labour leader and first minister,
said the party in Wales now wanted a second referendum and would back a remain
vote.
Pressure on Corbyn also came from Tom Watson, the deputy
leader, who has given his backing to grassroots groups demanding a ballot of
all members or a special conference to formally shift the position, as he
believes the party cannot wait until its autumn conference to fully support a
second referendum. This would have to be granted by the national executive
committee (NEC).
A People’s Vote source said the idea of a ballot of members
ought to focus the leadership’s attention, saying: “That threat is there and
Jeremy could avoid the kind of summer-long party split that would end up in
humiliation – if he moves fast now.”
Paul Mason, the Corbyn-supporting journalist, also backed a
Left 2030 petition for a ballot of members and in a Guardian article called for
“the officials who designed this fiasco, and ignored all evidence that it would
lead to disaster, [to] be removed from positions of influence”.
Labour insiders said Corbyn was keen to avoid being forced
into a new position by a damaging public row caused by a members’ ballot but
they described the leader as still somewhat torn over the issue as many of his
closest advisers and shadow cabinet ministers are in favour of respecting the
referendum result.
On the calls to remove Corbyn’s advisers, one source close
to the Labour leadership said: “There is absolutely no way they’ll be
successful. And they are going for the wrong people. Jeremy’s view is
influenced more by the shadow cabinet – people like Jon Trickett, Dan Carden.
It is majority leavers.”
A number of Labour MPs who represent leave constituencies
are also anxious about backing a second referendum, with Gloria De Piero urging
colleagues not to let a second referendum “wreck” the Labour party. She warned
a move to such a policy of overriding the 2016 result “would be an effective
ending of Labour’s historic coalition of working-class, middle-class, city and
non-city voters.”
Len McCluskey, the Unite general secretary, went so far as
to accuse some of those calling for a second referendum of trying to whip up a
coup against the leadership. “Labour has been the only party that has sought to
unite the nation on Brexit and this is an honourable objective that must not be
abandoned,” he said.
In a veiled dig at Watson, his old adversary, McCluskey
said: “Faced now with the serious prospect of a no-deal Tory prime minister,
Labour must stay united and show the country that it is ready to lead. There
are some rushing to advance other agendas but are doing so to undermine Jeremy
Corbyn. They will be seen for what they are and never forgiven by the members.”
One shadow minister said the leadership was “racked by
paranoia about plots” but the truth was that the membership actually wanted to
change the policy rather than the leader.
“There is a war going on,” the shadow minister said. “There
are people around Jeremy doing everything possible to stop the policy going to
a full second referendum. It is a power struggle for the Labour party. Do Len
McCluskey, Karie Murphy, Andrew Murray, and Seumas Milne run the Labour party?
Or is it the wider Corbyn political project?”
Some on the left of the party openly stressed their calls
for a second referendum were nothing to do with trying to remove Corbyn as
leader. Manuel Cortes, general secretary of the Transport Salaried Staffs’
Association (TSSA) union, said: “I supported Jeremy Corbyn for the leadership
of our party whilst others hedged their bets. Nonsense to suggest that having a
policy which chimes with our members is some sort of coup – time to support our
brilliant party activists on Brexit.”
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