Britain's Labor Party in open revolt over result of EU vote | Inquirer News

Britain’s Labor Party in open revolt over result of EU vote

/ 05:27 PM June 26, 2016

Britain's Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn makes a speech at Savoy Place in London, Saturday, June 25, 2016. Corbyn, whose Labour Party backed a vote to stay in the bloc, says the areas that voted most strongly to leave are "communities that have effectively been abandoned" by economic change and the austerity policies of Britain's Conservative government. Many Labour lawmakers strongly backed "remain" and accuse the socialist Corbyn, a longtime critic of the EU, of failing to rally party supporters behind staying in the bloc. Several are trying to rally support behind a bid to unseat Corbyn. (Stefan Rousseau/PA via AP)    UNITED KINGDOM OUT       -    NO SALES      -      NO ARCHIVES

Britain’s Labor leader Jeremy Corbyn makes a speech at Savoy Place in London, Saturday, June 25, 2016. Corbyn, whose Labor Party backed a vote to stay in the bloc, says the areas that voted most strongly to leave are “communities that have effectively been abandoned” by economic change and the austerity policies of Britain’s Conservative government. (Stefan Rousseau/PA via AP) 

LONDON — Britain’s opposition Labor Party is sliding into turmoil in the wake of the U.K.’s vote to exit from the European Union, a sign of how hard the shock decision is shaking British politics.

Two senior party members left the shadow cabinet Sunday amid a dispute over the leadership of Labor chief Jeremy Corbyn.

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The vote to quit the EU was widely seen as a stinging rejection of left-wing Labor, with many traditional Labor districts voting in defiance of the party leadership’s campaign to stay in the bloc.

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The perceived mishandling of the EU campaign bodes poorly for any future attempt by Labor to retake its parliamentary majority from the ruling Conservative Party, which itself is in limbo following the decision by Prime Minister David Cameron to quit in the fall.

On Sunday, Corbyn fired shadow foreign secretary Hilary Benn after Benn told Corbyn he had lost confidence in his ability to lead the party.

“There is no confidence that we will be able to win a general election as long as Jeremy remains the leader,” Benn told the BBC’s flagship breakfast show. “He’s a good and decent man, but he is not a leader. And that’s a problem.”

Benn’s dismissal was followed by the resignation of Labor health spokeswoman Heidi Alexander, who released a letter saying a change of leadership was needed.

“Those who will be hit hardest by the economic shock associated with the vote to leave the EU need a strong opposition, as do those communities who fear rising levels of intolerance, hatred and division,” she wrote.

The departures followed claims in the Observer newspaper that Benn was plotting against Corbyn./rga

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Europe demands quick divorce from divided Britain

TAGS: Brexit, Britain, Labor Party, Labour party

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