John McDonnell accuses Keir Starmer of attempting ‘grubby stitch up’ over Labour leadership election rules change

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer speaking at the TUC congress in London
PA Wire
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Sir Keir Starmer is facing a war with the Labour left as he seeks to force through major changes to the way the party elects future leaders.

Former shadow chancellor John McDonnell – a close ally of former leader Jeremy Corbyn - accused Mr Starmer of attempting a “grubby stitch up”, saying he had left himself open to “charges of dishonesty” after he announced plans to scrap the one member one vote rule at this weekend’s Labour Conference in Brighton.

“It’s a huge mistake,” Mr McDonnell told the BBC’s Today Programme on Wednesday. “Our constituents are facing a Universal Credit cut in a few weeks’ time…many of them a public sector pay freeze, energy prices going up, inflation going up and in the real world that’s what we should be addressing.

“Then to go into a Labour conference…and this is the first conference coming together physically as a result of Covid…to then concentrate on internal, factional disputes, it’s just not what people expected from Keir.”

The Labour leader, elected 18 months ago after Mr Corbyn stood down following his party’s disastrous 2019 election defeat by Boris Johnson’s Conservatives, wants to reintroduce an electoral college system which gives Labour MPs a greater say over how future leaders and deputy leaders are chosen.

The one member one vote system, introduced by former leader Ed Miliband, is credited with opening the way for Mr Corbyn to seize control of the party in 2015 and laying the ground for a shift to the hard left.

Mr Starmer was due to meet with leaders of the major trade unions to discuss the proposed changes which Mr Starmer hopes will be discussed at the party’s annual conference, which starts on Saturday – the first since the pandemic.

“Our rules as they are right now, focus us inwards to spend too much time talking to and about ourselves and they weaken the link with our unions,” the Labour leader said. “These are two things that have got to change if we are serious about winning the next election.”

But Mr McDonnell said the move risked breaking trust in the leader. He said: “Keir was only elected 18 months ago and he was elected by those people and he never mentioned any of these reforms in that election itself and I think he is opening himself up to charges of dishonesty and if it comes to the point when our own members can’…why do we unnecessarily divide the party in this way.

“What he should be doing is have a proper consultation – he can’t just bounce this through

“Look at the contrast in the media. You have Boris Johnson strutting the world stage, doing deals with [Joe] Biden and other world leaders, what do we have the Labour leader in grubby stitch up deals…it’s unacceptable.”

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