Jeremy Corbyn says ‘discussions are ongoing’ after Zarah Sultana claimed she would ‘co-lead new party’ with him – as it happened | Politics

Corbyn says ‘discussions are ongoing’ after Sultana said she would ‘co-lead new party’ with him

Jeremy Corbyn has said that “discussions are ongoing” after former Labour MP Zarah Sultana said that she would “co-lead the founding of a new party” with the ex-Labour leader.

In a post on social media, the independent MP and former Labour leader said:

Real change is coming.

One year on from the election, this Labour government has refused to deliver the change people expected and deserved. Poverty, inequality and war are not inevitable. Our country needs to change direction, now.

Congratulations to Zarah Sultana on her principled decision to leave the Labour party. I am delighted that she will help us build a real alternative.

The democratic foundations of a new kind of political party will soon take shape. Discussions are ongoing – and I am excited to work alongside all communities to fight for the future people deserve.

Together, we can create something that is desperately missing from our broken political system: hope.

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Key events

Closing summary

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Here is a summary from today’s blog:

  • Jeremy Corbyn has confirmed he is in discussions about creating a new leftwing political party, hours after the MP Zarah Sultana announced she was quitting Labour to co-lead the project. Sultana, the MP for Coventry South who had the Labour whip suspended last year for voting against the government over the two-child limit on benefits, said on Thursday night she was quitting Labour and would “co-lead the founding of a new party” with Corbyn.

  • The home secretary, Yvette Cooper told Sky News on Friday that she rejected Sultana’s accusation that Labour was failing to improve people’s lives, saying: “I just strongly disagree with her.” Responding to the former Labour MP’s announcement, Cooper said: “I think she has always taken a very different view to most people in the government on a lot of different things, and that’s for her to do so.”

  • Migrants arriving on small boats where a child has died should face prosecution, said Cooper. The home secretary told the BBC’s Today programme that increased overcrowding of boats was part of the reason that the number of arrivals had increased this year and that those who crowd on to boats should face “responsibility and accountability”.

  • Cooper welcomed reports that French police had intervened in French waters to stop a small boat setting off across the Channel. Responding to a report from the BBC’s Today programme that officers had slashed at a boat with a knife while it was in shallow waters off the French coast, the home secretary said: “That is a different strategy, and that is welcome that it’s taking action in the shallow waters, but we want broader action.”

  • Keir Starmer said he has a good relationship with US president Donald Trump because they both “care about family”. The prime minister told the BBC Radio 4 podcast Political Thinking With Nick Robinson it was “in the national interest” for the two men to connect.

  • Downing Street has welcomed new French tactics to tackle small boat crossings, saying it is a “significant moment”. Downing Street also said on Friday that Starmer’s efforts to “reset” relations with Europe have helped bring about a change in French tactics in the Channel.

  • Alastair Campbell said he would not “underestimate” how much the government’s handling of the situation in Gaza has led people to question “what is Labour about?”. He was speaking after Sultana announced she was resigning from Starmer’s party and accused the government of being an “active participant in genocide” in Gaza, in her statement posted on X. Additionally, John McDonnell, independent MP for Hayes and Harlington and former shadow chancellor for Labour from 2015 to 2020, said Labour needs to “ask themselves” why someone like Sultana would choose to leave.

  • Rachel Reeves has not given herself enough fiscal headroom to manage public finances, Charlie Bean, the former deputy of the Bank of England has said, and has to “neurotically fine tune taxes”. Bean, who is also a former member of the OBR’s budget responsibility committee, told Radio 4’s Today programme the chancellor had chosen fiscal rules that give her a “very small margin” of headroom.

  • Critics of the UK’s role in the Gaza war are considering setting up an independent tribunal if, as expected, Labour blocks a bill tabled by Corbyn backing an official inquiry. Government whips are expected to object to the former Labour party leader’s bill in the Commons on Friday, leaving him with few practical options for his legislation to pass.

  • A hearing to decide whether the move to designate Palestine Action as a terrorist organisation should be temporarily blocked has begun in London. Huda Ammori, the co-founder of Palestine Action, is asking the high court to temporarily block the government from proscribing it under the Terrorism Act 2000, pending a potential legal challenge against the decision to ban the direct action group.

  • The housing minister has promised to crack down on unfair service charges and what he called the “wild west” of property managing agents as he launched the next stage of the government’s reforms of the leasehold system. Matthew Pennycook told the Guardian he wanted to stop a number of unfair practices undertaken by some companies, including overcharging and imposing large, unexpected repair fees.

  • Ministers have agreed to pay £1.6m in compensation after a data breach exposed the personal information of Afghan nationals seeking to flee the Taliban takeover. In a written statement to parliament on Friday, armed forces minister Luke Pollard said the MoD had agreed to pay up to £4,000 to each person affected, with the total cost expected to be “in the region of £1.6m”.

  • Starmer and Emmanuel Macron will host a meeting of the coalition of the willing when the French president visits the UK next week. The prime minister and France’s leader will dial into a meeting with allies on Thursday, as Macron makes his first state visit to the UK, it is understood.

  • The technology secretary has demanded an overhaul of the UK’s leading artificial intelligence institute in a wide-ranging letter that calls for a switch in focus to defence and national security, as well as leadership changes. Peter Kyle said it was clear further action was needed to ensure the government-backed Alan Turing Institute met its full potential.

  • Liberal Democrat candidate Terry Rooney won the Benfieldside ward byelection on Thursday to unseat Reform UK’s Andrew Kilburn – who was elected during the county-wide elections on 1 May but stepped down after it was discovered he already worked for the council. The Lib Dems won with a total of 824 votes, as Reform slipped to third in the byelection, getting 747 votes, behind Labour, who got 800.

  • The Conservatives have won back their Newark West seat in Nottingham county council, defeating Reform UK by just eight votes in Thursday’s byelection. The seat, which was held by Keith Girling for 18 years before being lost to Reform’s Desmond Clarke in the May election earlier this year, was reclaimed by the councillor with a total of 680 votes, with Reform’s candidate Caroline Hinds receiving 672.

  • Liberal Democrat MP Danny Chambers’ private member’s bill has passed through the House of Commons today, with the government backing the bill. Chambers, who is also a veterinary surgeon, said the animal welfare (import of dogs, cats and ferrets) bill will help improve the UK’s “biosecurity”.

  • Former deputy prime minister Thérèse Coffey has claimed she was advised by civil servants to knowingly break the law. Coffey, who also held several other cabinet positions, including work and pensions secretary, health secretary and environment secretary, became a Conservative peer earlier this year.

  • Llamas and alpacas should receive legal protections from dog attacks, MPs have agreed. Dog owners already face a fine if their pet attacks or worries farm animals listed in the Dogs (Protection of Livestock) Act 1953, such as cattle, sheep, pigs and horses. But after a Commons debate, MPs have agreed to add “camelids” to this list, giving llamas and alpacas in England and Wales similar protections as they have in Scotland.

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