by
Les May
FIRST
some figures. Amongst the Opposition parties Labour has 247
seats, the SNP 35, Independents 15, Liberal Democrats 14, Independent
Group for Change 5, Plaid Cymru 4 and the Green Party 1. In other
words Labour has more than three times the rest of the Opposition
parties combined and in particular it has 233 seats more than
the Liberal Democrats.
So
if there is a ‘no confidence’ vote in Parliament and the Johnson
government loses its majority and is unable to secure a majority in a
second vote within 14 days the outcome should be either an immediate
general election or a cross party ‘caretaker’ government mandated
to delay leaving the European Union without a deal, it would seem to
be uncontestable that the leader of the caretaker administration
should be Jeremy Corbyn.
Apparently
not. Jo Swinson,
who since July has been
leader of the LibDems, has said he ‘risks
jeopardising a vote of no confidence in the government by insisting
he becomes caretaker PM’.
Previously
she had said he was
‘divisive’.
Writing
in the ‘i’
last week Kate
Maltby,
who on her website modestly describes herself as ‘a
critic, columnist and scholar’
tried to cast doubt on Corbyn’s fitness to lead by claiming that
some of his social media supporters were ‘anti-semitic’ and were
linked to those opposed to vaccination of children. (As
she provided zero evidence for these claims I do hope she is a little
more assiduous in carrying out research for the PhD she tells us she
is doing on her website.)
In
mid August Caroline
Lucas
decided she would bypass Corbyn by offering to broker a deal for ten
women MPs to form a cross party Cabinet. (Interestingly
she was attacked in the
Guardian
because,
amongst
other things, none
of them
were ‘trans’
and most were not lesbians.)
Yesterday
Yasmin
Alibhai-Brown
used her column in the ‘i’
to claim he was ‘worryingly
beholden to his close, maniacally anti-capitalist
advisers’ and
that he should let Caroline Lucas lead a temporary government of
national unity.
What
these women are about is delegitimising Corbyn and, by inference,
Labour’s claim to be the party to form a caretaker government.
Corbyn has been elected leader of the Labour party on two occasions.
He was leader of the party when it confounded the pundits by denying
Theresa May a clear majority in 2017. None
of the four women referred to above can make anything approaching
such a claim.
You
cannot maintain credibility by first attacking Boris
Johnson
for avoiding scrutiny by closing down Parliament for five weeks and
then seeking to find an excuse for bypassing the leader of the
largest opposition party. If Jo
Swinson
is listening, ‘You
have 14 MPs, Corbyn has 247. Go figure’.
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