2015 Labour Party (UK) leadership election


















Labour Party leadership election, 2015




← 2010
14 August – 12 September 2015 (2015-08-14 – 2015-09-12)
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Turnout 422,871
(76.3%)











































 

Jeremy Corbyn closeup.jpg

Andy Burnham2.jpg
Candidate

Jeremy Corbyn

Andy Burnham
Popular vote

251,417
80,462
Percentage

59.5%
19.0%

 

Official portrait of Yvette Cooper crop 2.jpg

Official portrait of Liz Kendall crop 2.jpg
Candidate

Yvette Cooper

Liz Kendall
Popular vote
71,928
18,857
Percentage
17.0%
4.5%








Leader before election

Harriet Harman (acting)
Ed Miliband



Elected Leader

Jeremy Corbyn




The 2015 Labour Party leadership election was won by Jeremy Corbyn with a landslide victory. The election was triggered by the resignation of Ed Miliband as Leader of the Labour Party on 8 May 2015, following the party's defeat at the 2015 general election. Harriet Harman, the Deputy Leader, became Acting Leader but announced that she would stand down after the leadership election.[1]


Four candidates were successfully nominated to stand in the election: Andy Burnham, Yvette Cooper, Jeremy Corbyn, and Liz Kendall. The voting process began on Friday 14 August 2015 and closed on Thursday 10 September 2015, and the results were announced on Saturday 12 September 2015. Voting was by Labour Party members and registered and affiliated supporters, using the alternative vote system.


Support for Corbyn, who entered the race as the dark horse candidate,[2] and the release of opinion polls which showed him leading the race, led to high-profile interventions by a number of prominent Labour figures including Gordon Brown,[3]Tony Blair,[4]Jack Straw,[5]David Miliband,[6] and Alastair Campbell, among others,[7] many of whom argued that Corbyn's election as leader would leave the party unelectable.


In the event, Corbyn was elected in a landslide in the first round, with 59.5% of the votes, winning in all three sections of the ballot. Less than a year later, the party headed into a second leadership election, where Corbyn again won in a landslide victory with an increased share of the vote. Corbyn subsequently led Labour into the 2017 general election, in which Labour gained 30 seats - though fell short of an overall victory.




Contents






  • 1 Procedure


    • 1.1 Timetable




  • 2 Candidates


    • 2.1 Nominated


    • 2.2 Withdrew


    • 2.3 Declined




  • 3 Endorsements


  • 4 Media reaction


  • 5 Dispute over election integrity


    • 5.1 Rejected voters


    • 5.2 Missing ballots




  • 6 Debates


    • 6.1 Television


    • 6.2 Radio


    • 6.3 Online




  • 7 Opinion polling


    • 7.1 Polling of eligible voters


      • 7.1.1 July 2015


      • 7.1.2 August 2015




    • 7.2 Polling of Labour voters


    • 7.3 Polling of British voters


    • 7.4 Polling of London voters


    • 7.5 Polling before close of nominations


      • 7.5.1 Labour members


      • 7.5.2 Labour voters


      • 7.5.3 Former Labour PPCs


      • 7.5.4 British residents






  • 8 Result


  • 9 Political reaction to the result


    • 9.1 Domestic


    • 9.2 International




  • 10 Analysis


  • 11 See also


  • 12 References


  • 13 External links





Procedure


The leadership election, triggered by Ed Miliband's resignation, took place under the reformed rules adopted from the proposals of the February 2014 Collins Report, which was led by Ray Collins, Baron Collins of Highbury.[8] The plan entailed a shorter election than the one that took place in 2010, with a new leader being in place before Labour's party conference in September 2015.[9]


The review changed the way in which Labour elects leaders. Under the former system, a three-way electoral college chose the leader, with one-third weight given to the votes of the Parliamentary Labour Party (i.e., Labour members of the House of Commons and Labour members of the European Parliament), one-third to individual Labour Party members, and one third to the trade union and affiliated societies sections. Following the Collins review, the electoral college was replaced by a pure "one member, one vote" (OMOV) system. Candidates are elected by members and registered and affiliated supporters, who all receive a maximum of one vote and all votes are weighted equally.[10] This meant that, for example, members of Labour-affiliated trade unions needed to register as Labour supporters to vote.


To stand, candidates now needed to be nominated by at least 15% of the Parliamentary Labour Party (PLP), i.e. 35 MPs, at that time. The vote, as in previous elections, was held under the alternative vote (instant-runoff) system. The deputy leadership election was held under the same rules.


The election itself was overseen by Electoral Reform Services.[11]


In late August, the Labour Party reported that about 552,000 members and supporters were eligible to vote; about 292,000 full members, 148,000 affiliated supporters (members of trade unions and socialist societies who opted to affiliate), plus 112,000 registered supporters.[12][13]



Timetable


A meeting of Labour's National Executive Committee took place on 13 May 2015 to set a timetable and procedure for the two elections.[14]




  • Tuesday 9 June 2015 – Nominations open


  • Monday 15 June 2015 (12:00) – Nominations for the Leader close


  • Wednesday 17 June 2015 (12:00) – Nominations for the Deputy Leader close


  • Wednesday 17 June 2015 (12:00) – Hustings period opens


  • Friday 31 July 2015 (12:00) – Supporting nominations close


  • Wednesday 12 August 2015 (15:00) – Last date to join as member, affiliated support or registered supporter and be able to vote[15]


  • Friday 14 August 2015 – Ballot papers are sent out


  • Thursday 10 September 2015 (12:00) – Ballot closes


  • Saturday 12 September 2015 – Special Conference to announce the results


The deadline on 12 August 2015 to join as a member or supporter was extended by 3 hours due to heavy demand making the party website difficult to use.[16]



Candidates



Nominated


To be placed on the ballot, candidates for leader had to obtain the nominations of 35 MPs. An MP who nominates a candidate does not have to subsequently support, or vote for, that candidate. Some MPs have stated that they nominated only to ensure that candidate got onto the ballot paper.[17]

















































The four candidates officially nominated by members of the Parliamentary Labour Party
Candidate Constituency Office Announced PLP Nominations Share

Andy Burnham
(campaign)
Leigh
Shadow Health Secretary
(2011–2015)
13 May 2015[18]
68 29.31%
Yvette Cooper Normanton, Pontefract and Castleford
Shadow Home Secretary
(2011–2015)
13 May 2015[19]
59 25.43%
Liz Kendall Leicester West
Shadow Minister for Care and Older People
(2011–2015)
10 May 2015[20][21]
41 17.76%

Jeremy Corbyn
(campaign)
Islington North None 3 June 2015[22][23]
36 15.52%
Undeclared 28
12.07%

The number of MPs next to the candidate's name below includes the candidate, who can count as one of the 35 MPs needed. Public nominations for candidates by MPs were as follows:[24]




  • Andy Burnham (68): Debbie Abrahams, Heidi Alexander, David Anderson, Hilary Benn, Luciana Berger, Clive Betts, Paul Blomfield, Kevin Brennan, Julie Cooper, David Crausby, Alex Cunningham, Wayne David, Peter Dowd, Michael Dugher, Bill Esterson, Paul Farrelly, Rob Flello, Yvonne Fovargue, Pat Glass, Mary Glindon, Lilian Greenwood, Margaret Greenwood, Nia Griffith, Andrew Gwynne, Harry Harpham, Carolyn Harris, Stephen Hepburn, Kate Hoey, Kate Hollern, Dan Jarvis, Gerald Jones, Graham Jones, Barbara Keeley, Ian Lavery, Emma Lewell-Buck, Ian Lucas, Holly Lynch, Justin Madders, Rachael Maskell, Chris Matheson, Kerry McCarthy, Andy McDonald, Conor McGinn, Liz McInnes, Alan Meale, Ian Mearns, Lisa Nandy, Albert Owen, Teresa Pearce, Lucy Powell, Yasmin Qureshi, Angela Rayner, Jamie Reed, Christina Rees, Rachel Reeves, Steve Rotheram, Jeff Smith, Owen Smith, Keir Starmer, Jo Stevens, Nick Thomas-Symonds, Anna Turley, Karl Turner, Derek Twigg, Valerie Vaz, Alan Whitehead, Iain Wright[24]


  • Yvette Cooper (59): Jon Ashworth, Ian Austin, Adrian Bailey, Roberta Blackman-Woods, Lyn Brown, Nick Brown, Chris Bryant, Karen Buck, Richard Burden, Liam Byrne, Ruth Cadbury, Ann Clwyd, Vernon Coaker, Judith Cummins, Jim Cunningham, Nic Dakin, Geraint Davies, Thangam Debbonaire, Jack Dromey, Maria Eagle, Jim Fitzpatrick, Colleen Fletcher, Vicky Foxcroft, Helen Goodman, Kate Green, Fabian Hamilton, David Hanson, Sue Hayman, John Healey, Sharon Hodgson, George Howarth, Diana Johnson, Helen Jones, Kevan Jones, Stephen Kinnock, Chris Leslie, Khalid Mahmood, Shabana Mahmood, Seema Malhotra, John Mann, Steve McCabe, Catherine McKinnell, Madeleine Moon, Melanie Onn, Matthew Pennycook, Jess Phillips, Bridget Phillipson, Stephen Pound, Marie Rimmer, Geoffrey Robinson, Naz Shah, Virendra Sharma, Paula Sherriff, Andy Slaughter, Ruth Smeeth, Karin Smyth, John Spellar, Daniel Zeichner[24]


  • Liz Kendall (41): Sir Kevin Barron, Tom Blenkinsop, Jenny Chapman, Ann Coffey, Simon Danczuk, Gloria De Piero, Stephen Doughty, Jim Dowd, Julie Elliott, Louise Ellman, Chris Evans, Paul Flynn, Mike Gapes, Mark Hendrick, Margaret Hodge, Tristram Hunt, Mike Kane, Peter Kyle, Ivan Lewis, Fiona Mactaggart, Siobhain McDonagh, Pat McFadden, Alison McGovern, Jessica Morden, Toby Perkins, Steve Reed, Jonathan Reynolds, Emma Reynolds, Joan Ryan, Barry Sheerman, Gavin Shuker, Nick Smith, Angela Smith, Wes Streeting, Gisela Stuart, Stephen Timms, Stephen Twigg, Chuka Umunna, Phil Wilson, John Woodcock[24]


  • Jeremy Corbyn (36): Diane Abbott, Rushanara Ali, Margaret Beckett, Richard Burgon, Dawn Butler, Ronnie Campbell, Sarah Champion, Jo Cox, Neil Coyle, Jon Cruddas, Clive Efford, Frank Field, Louise Haigh, Kelvin Hopkins, Rupa Huq, Imran Hussain, Huw Irranca-Davies, Sadiq Khan, David Lammy, Clive Lewis, Rebecca Long-Bailey, Gordon Marsden, John McDonnell, Michael Meacher, Grahame Morris, Chi Onwurah, Kate Osamor, Tulip Siddiq, Dennis Skinner, Andrew Smith, Cat Smith, Gareth Thomas, Emily Thornberry, Jon Trickett, Catherine West[24]


Before dropping out of the race on 12 June, Mary Creagh had 10 nominations: Sarah Champion, Jo Cox, Neil Coyle, Thangam Debbonaire, Helen Hayes, Susan Jones, Mike Kane, Stephen Kinnock, Tulip Siddiq[24]


A total of 26 Labour MPs did not nominate any candidate: Graham Allen, Ben Bradshaw, Alan Campbell, Rosie Cooper, Mary Creagh, Stella Creasy, John Cryer, Angela Eagle, Natascha Engel, Caroline Flint, Barry Gardiner, Roger Godsiff, Harriet Harman, Meg Hillier, Lindsay Hoyle, Alan Johnson, Sir Gerald Kaufman, Ed Miliband, Rob Marris, Ian Murray, Graham Stringer, Mark Tami, Keith Vaz, Tom Watson, David Winnick, Rosie Winterton



Withdrew




  • Mary Creagh, Shadow Secretary of State for International Development and MP for Wakefield[25]


  • Chuka Umunna, Shadow Secretary of State for Business, Innovation and Skills and MP for Streatham[26][27][28]



Declined




  • Diane Abbott, former Shadow Minister for Public Health, candidate for leader in 2010 and MP for Hackney North and Stoke Newington (running for Mayor of London)[29][30]


  • Rushanara Ali, former Shadow Minister for Education and MP for Bethnal Green and Bow (running for Deputy Leader)[31]


  • Stella Creasy, MP for Walthamstow[32] (running for Deputy Leader)[33]


  • Angela Eagle, Shadow Leader of the House of Commons, former Exchequer Secretary to the Treasury and MP for Wallasey[34] (running for Deputy Leader)[35]


  • Tristram Hunt, Shadow Secretary of State for Education and MP for Stoke-on-Trent Central[36][37]


  • Dan Jarvis, Shadow Minister of Justice and MP for Barnsley Central[38][39][40]


  • Alan Johnson, former Home Secretary, former Secretary of State for Health and MP for Hull West and Hessle[41][42]


  • David Lammy, former Minister of State for Innovation, Universities and Skills and MP for Tottenham (ran for Mayor of London)[42][43]


  • Ian Lavery, MP for Wansbeck[44][45]


  • John McDonnell, MP for Hayes and Harlington[46]


  • Alison McGovern, MP for Wirral South[47][48]


  • David Miliband, President and CEO of the International Rescue Committee, former Foreign Secretary, candidate for leader in 2010 and former MP for South Shields[49][50][51]


  • Lisa Nandy, MP for Wigan[48][52]


  • Jamie Reed, MP for Copeland[53]


  • Rachel Reeves, Shadow Secretary of State for Work and Pensions and MP for Leeds West[14][54]


  • Owen Smith, Shadow Secretary of State for Wales and MP for Pontypridd[55]


  • Keir Starmer, former Director of Public Prosecutions and MP for Holborn and St Pancras[56]


  • Jon Trickett, Shadow Minister without Portfolio, former Shadow Minister for the Cabinet Office and MP for Hemsworth[citation needed]



Endorsements




Media reaction


Burnham

Burnham has been praised for having both "a radical left-wing vision" and being credible enough "to unite the party and win back power",[57] as well as for being someone who "actually listens to party members and the public".[58]


Burnham attracted press criticism for claiming £17,000 a year from the taxpayer to rent a London flat, despite owning another within walking distance of the House of Commons. A spokesman for Burnham said that renting out the original flat was necessary to "cover his costs" as parliamentary rule changes meant he was no longer able to claim for mortgage interest expenses.[59] Burnham was criticised for saying that Labour should have a woman leader "when the time is right", with the New Statesman saying that he had "tripped over his mouth again".


Cooper

Cooper was praised by the Huffington Post for her hard work in local constituencies during the leadership contest[60] and for her preparation for the Local Government Association hustings.[61]


She has been criticised both for thanking David Miliband for putting her as his second choice (after Liz Kendall)[62] and for her "broken, downbeat delivery".[63]


Corbyn

Corbyn's leadership bid has been the subject of fierce discussion within the media. Janan Ganesh in the Financial Times has argued that the election of Corbyn "spells disaster" for the Labour Party.[64]Owen Jones argued in The Guardian that the reason Corbyn was so popular was because he "offers a coherent, inspiring and, crucially, a hopeful vision" addressing social injustice and economic inequality, comparing the surge of support for Corbyn to the popularity of both UKIP in England and the Scottish National Party (SNP) in Scotland.[65]


Kendall

In June 2015, Kendall's leadership bid received praise from The Sun, who said that she is the "only prayer they [the Labour Party] have". The Sun also praised her for saying 'the country comes first' in response to Andy Burnham who said 'the [Labour] Party always comes first' in the Newsnight Labour leadership hustings.[66]Commentators from across the political spectrum have said that Kendall is the leadership candidate that the Conservatives "fear the most".[67][68][69]


However, the Huffington Post criticised her, saying "Liz Kendall just doesn't seem to have it, she seems to be always on the verge of tripping over her own words, as if she is perpetually being caught off guard."[60]



Dispute over election integrity




Labour Party membership since 1993


         Labour Party full members (excluding affiliates and supporters)


 






























100,000


200,000


300,000


400,000


500,000




1994 Tony Blair


2000


2006 G. Brown


2010 Ed Milliband


Aug 2015 pre-election







One of the most notable features of the election was the large increase in Labour Party membership, and the registration of significant numbers of the new affiliated and registered classes of voting supporters, during the period of the campaign.[70] Concern was expressed that the new rules were unfairly benefiting Corbyn,[71] and there might be a legal challenge,[72] but in the event the result was so decisive these concerns were not pursued after the election.[73]


In June 2015, the Conservative-identifying political commentator Toby Young wrote in the Telegraph encouraging Conservatives to join Labour to vote for Jeremy Corbyn,[74] his reason being "to consign Labour to electoral oblivion". This trended on Twitter as #ToriesforCorbyn and the attempt, as well as Labour's response, were subject to criticism.[75] Two days later the Communist Party of Great Britain (Provisional Central Committee) wrote also in support of Corbyn.[76] Following this, Labour MP John Mann called for the election to be halted.[77] Acting leader of the party Harriet Harman responded by calling on constituency parties to check new members, but stated that Labour has "a robust system to prevent fraudulent or malicious applications." Labour MP Fabian Hamilton stated there was "no evidence" that groups were trying to infiltrate the election.[78] Leadership candidates Andy Burnham and Liz Kendall also responded by saying there was no evidence of infiltration, and while not dismissing the claims, Corbyn stated he only wanted "genuine Labour supporters" to vote for him.[79][80]



Rejected voters


It emerged in early August 2015 that 260 former candidates from the Green Party, Left Unity and the Trade Union and Socialist Coalition had attempted to become registered supporters but would now be blocked from voting.[81] Shortly before this it was revealed that Conservative MP and former junior minister Tim Loughton had been caught applying to become a registered Labour supporter, subsequently claiming that his intention was to "blow the gaff on what a complete farce the whole thing is".[82] Veteran Labour MP Barry Sheerman also joined calls for the election to be "paused" over the fears of infiltration by other parties.[71] The Labour Party told representatives of the four candidates at a meeting on 11 August that 1,200 members and supporters of other parties had been excluded and a further 800 were under investigation.[83] Harriet Harman at the time admitted that as many as 100,000 people may be blocked from voting.[84]


The number of those rejected would eventually reach 56,000,[85] around 9.1% of the 610,753 considered eligible to vote at the start of the contest.[86] According to the party, 45,000 of those were rejected for not being on the electoral register.[87]


Labour also confirmed that it would cancel supporters' votes after they had been cast if it was found that they were members of other parties.[88] A number of high-profile individuals have been blocked from voting, including Marcus Chown,[89]Jeremy Hardy, Douglas Henshall,[90]Ken Loach,[89]Francesca Martinez,[90]Mark Serwotka,[91] Pete Sinclair,[92]Mark Steel,[93]Luke Wright[94] and Toby Young.


Andrew MacKinlay, a former Labour MP, further alleged that Labour was attempting to rig its own leadership election against Corbyn;[95] a view shared by Jeremy Hardy.[96] Such allegations became known to the media – and particularly Corbyn supporters – as the "Labour Purge", with #LabourPurge trending on Twitter.[97][98] Claims of such a "purge" of Corbyn supporters were rejected by Harman who insisted that the exclusion processes were impartial to candidates.[72] Scottish newspaper The National printed a page-long satirical cartoon speculating further vote-rigging by Labour's leadership.[99]



Missing ballots


With less than 24 hours to go before the voting deadline, the party closed their telephone helpline. The move came during widespread complaints from "thousands" of voters who were missing emailed or physical ballot papers.[100]The Guardian reported that one of their sources in the leadership camps stated that "the party has basically decided to stop taking calls and if you don't have a vote, you're now basically not getting one."[101] The party refused to confirm how many ballot papers had actually been sent.[102]Andy Burnham publicly criticised the number of missing ballots and the closure of the phone line.[103]


Labour MP David Lammy has called for a full inquiry into the missing ballot papers.[104] Of the 200 people his team phone called in London on the eve of the deadline, one in five were missing their ballots.



Debates



Television













































Programme
Date
Moderator
Channel
Information

Newsnight
Wednesday 17 June; 19.00

Laura Kuenssberg

BBC Two

On BBC iPlayer
Victoria Derbyshire Show
Monday 13 July; 09.15

Victoria Derbyshire
BBC Two

On BBC iPlayer

Sunday Politics
Sunday 19 July; 11.00

Andrew Neil

BBC One

On BBC iPlayer

Labour Leadership Hustings
Tuesday 1 September; 15.30

Krishnan Guru-Murthy

Channel 4

On Channel 4 News

Labour's Future: The Final Debate
Thursday 3 September; 19.00

Adam Boulton

Sky News Channel

On Sky News


Radio
























Show
Date
Moderator
Station
Information

The Labour Leadership Debate
Wednesday 22 July; 19.00

Iain Dale

LBC

On LBC website
5 Live Breakfast
Tuesday 25 August; 08.30

Nicky Campbell

BBC Radio 5 Live

On BBC iPlayer Radio


Online



















Show
Date
Moderator
Panel
Online provider
Information

The future of Labour: meet the next leader
Thursday 27 August; 19:10
Hugh Muir
Rafael Behr, John Harris and Anne Perkins

The Guardian

Live stream


Opinion polling


The polls in this section have been undertaken by media pollsters known to use industry standard polling methods.


The polls below were conducted after nominations for the leadership ballot closed.


Where there is more than one line for a poll, this is for when a candidate has been eliminated and their second or third preference votes passed onto another candidate.



Polling of eligible voters


The polls below show voting intention amongst those eligible to vote in the leadership election.



July 2015




































































YouGov,[105] 17–21 July 2015,
1,054 eligible voters[a]
Candidate
Party Members
Affiliates/£3 sign ups[b]
Total

First Round

Jeremy Corbyn

40%

57%

43%

Andy Burnham
27%
21%
26%

Yvette Cooper
21%
14%
20%

Liz Kendall
12%
8%
11%

Second Round

Jeremy Corbyn

41%

60%

44%

Andy Burnham
31%
22%
29%

Yvette Cooper
28%
18%
26%

Final Round

Jeremy Corbyn

50%

69%

53%

Andy Burnham

50%
31%
47%


August 2015





























































































YouGov,[106] 6–10 August 2015,
1,411 eligible voters[a]
Candidate
Party Members
Union affiliates[c]
Registered supporters[d]
Total[e]

First Round

Jeremy Corbyn

49%

67%

55%

53%

Andy Burnham
22%
14%
24%
21%

Yvette Cooper
20%
10%
18%
18%

Liz Kendall
9%
8%
4%
8%

Second Round

Jeremy Corbyn

50%

69%

56%

54%

Andy Burnham
24%
16%
24%
23%

Yvette Cooper
26%
15%
20%
23%

Corbyn vs Burnham[f]

Jeremy Corbyn

56%

72%

64%

60%

Andy Burnham
44%
28%
36%
40%

Corbyn vs Cooper[g]

Jeremy Corbyn

57%

76%

66%

62%

Yvette Cooper
43%
24%
34%
38%


Polling of Labour voters


The polls below asked Labour supporters across the country how they would vote in the leadership election if they were eligible.































































Poll source
Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Andy
Burnham
Yvette
Cooper
Jeremy
Corbyn
Liz
Kendall
Don't Know

Opinium[107]
21–25 August 2015
474 Labour voters[h]
27%
22%

39%
12%


Opinium[108]
11–14 August 2015
499 Labour voters[h]
29%
19%

37%
15%


Research Now[109]
28–29 July 2015
? Labour voters[i]

36%
20%
28%
16%


Opinium[110]
24–27 July 2015
481 Labour voters[i]

39%
22%
24%
15%


Ipsos MORI[111][112]
14–16 June 2015
275 Labour voters[i]

23%
20%
9%
11%

38%


Polling of British voters


The polls below asked voters across the country how they would vote in the leadership election if they were eligible.



















































































Poll source
Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Andy
Burnham
Yvette
Cooper
Jeremy
Corbyn
Liz
Kendall
Other/
Undecided

Opinium[107]
21–25 August 2015
1,711 British voters[j]
18%
13%

26%
11%

32%

Opinium[108]
11–14 August 2015
1,719 British voters[j]
18%
12%

23%
11%

36%

Survation[113][114]
12–13 August 2015
1,007 British residents[k]
25%
15%

28%
12%
19%

Research Now[109]
28–29 July 2015
1,001 British residents[l]

30%
24%
24%
21%
1%

Opinium[110]
24–27 July 2015
1,732 British residents[l]

21%
14%
16%
12%

38%

ORB/Independent[115]
21–23 June 2015
2,000 British residents[l]

36%
20%
18%
25%
1%

Ipsos MORI[111][112]
14–16 June 2015
1,005 British residents[l]

15%
14%
5%
11%

55%


Polling of London voters


The polls below asked voters in London how they would vote in the leadership election if they were eligible.






























Poll source
Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Andy
Burnham
Yvette
Cooper
Jeremy
Corbyn
Liz
Kendall
Other/
Undecided

YouGov/London Evening Standard[116][117]
10–12 August 2015
1,153 London residents[m]
21%
20%

46%
12%

11%
10%

24%
6%

48%


Polling before close of nominations



Labour members


The polls below were conducted before nominations for the leadership closed and therefore include Labour politicians who were not in the final four candidates who were nominated.





























Poll source
Date(s)
Sample
size
Andy
Burnham
Chuka
Umunna
Yvette
Cooper
Dan
Jarvis
Liz
Kendall
David
Miliband
Other
Don't
Know

ESRC/YouGov[118]
12–15 May 2015
1,200 Labour members[n]

18%
12%
9%
5%
2%
2%
34%

38%


Labour voters





























Poll source
Date(s)
Sample
size
Andy
Burnham
Chuka
Umunna
Yvette
Cooper
Dan
Jarvis
Rachel
Reeves
Tristram
Hunt
Liz
Kendall
Other/
Undecided

Survation/Mail on Sunday[119]
8–9 May 2015
329 Labour voters[o]

20%
17%
11%
9%
7%
6%
6%

24%






























Poll source
Date(s)
Sample
size
David
Miliband
Chuka
Umunna
Andy
Burnham
Yvette
Cooper
Dan
Jarvis
Tristram
Hunt
Liz
Kendall
Rachel
Reeves
Other/
Undecided

Survation/Mail on Sunday[119]
8–9 May 2015
329 Labour voters[p]

24%
18%
15%
10%
8%
4%
4%
3%
14%


Former Labour PPCs

























Poll source
Date(s)
Sample
size
Andy
Burnham
Yvette
Cooper
Tristram
Hunt
Liz
Kendall
Chuka
Umunna
Other/
Undecided
Westminster Public Affairs[120]
11–15 May 2015
62 former Labour PPCs[q]

27%
8%
3%
18%
13%

31%


British residents










































Poll source
Date(s)
Sample
size
Andy
Burnham
Yvette
Cooper
Tristram
Hunt
Dan
Jarvis
Liz
Kendall
David
Miliband
Rachel
Reeves
Chuka
Umunna
Don't
Know

Survation/Mail on Sunday[119]
8–9 May 2015
1,027 British residents[l]

14.1%
11.2%
6%
6.4%
5.1%
 —
4.2%
12.2%

40.6%
12%
8%
6%
6%
5%

18%
3.%
11%

31%




  1. ^ ab Labour Party members, registered supporters and signed up trade unionists who are eligible to vote in the leadership election


  2. ^ Members of affiliated Trade Unions who signed up to vote in the leadership election, and members of the public who paid £3 and signed up to receive a vote in the leadership election.


  3. ^ Members of affiliated Trade Unions who signed up to vote in the leadership election.


  4. ^ Members of the public who paid £3 and signed up to receive a vote in the leadership election.


  5. ^ Note that Labour Party rules state that the candidate who wins over 50% of the votes is declared the winner; thus, on these figures, Corbyn would have won without the need for a second or third round.


  6. ^ As Cooper and Burnham tied for second place in the poll's second round, YouGov published data showing the result in a run-off between Corbyn/Burnham and Corbyn/Cooper.


  7. ^ As Burnham and Cooper tied for second place in the poll's second round, YouGov published data showing the result in a run-off between Corbyn/Burnham and Corbyn/Cooper.


  8. ^ ab People who are likely to vote Labour in next general election.


  9. ^ abc People who voted Labour in 2015 general election.


  10. ^ ab People who are likely to vote in next general election, excluding residents unlikely to vote.


  11. ^ Residents over 18 in Great Britain after watching video clips of candidates


  12. ^ abcde Residents over 18 in Great Britain


  13. ^ Residents over 18 in London


  14. ^ People who are due-paying members of the Labour Party.


  15. ^ People who say they would vote Labour at the next general election.


  16. ^ People who say they would vote Labour at the next general election.


  17. ^ People who were unsuccessful Labour Party candidates in the 2015 general election. The 62 defeated parliamentary candidates gave their views anonymously.




Result








































































Candidate[121]
Party members
Registered supporters
Affiliated supporters
Total
Votes
%
Votes
%
Votes
%
Votes
%


Jeremy Corbyn Green tickY

121,751

49.6

88,449

83.8

41,217

57.6

251,417






59.5


Andy Burnham
55,698
22.7
6,160
5.8
18,604
26.0
80,462





19.0


Yvette Cooper
54,470
22.2
8,415
8.0
9,043
12.6
71,928





17.0


Liz Kendall
13,601
5.5
2,574
2.4
2,682
3.8
18,857





4.5

Turnout for the vote was 422,871 (76.3%) of the 554,272 eligible voters, with 207 spoilt ballots. 343,995 votes (81.3%) were cast online, the UK's largest online ballot.[122]



Political reaction to the result



Domestic


Labour Party

Ed Miliband, former party leader, offered his support to Corbyn and urged other Labour MPs to do so, though he ruled himself out of taking on a position in Corbyn's shadow cabinet, to focus on representing his constituency.[123]Kezia Dugdale, leader of Scottish Labour, declared that "politics has changed" and people desired a "radical change", with Corbyn's election to the leadership showing that Labour had "listened to that call".[124]Carwyn Jones, leader of Welsh Labour and First Minister of Wales, congratulated Corbyn and urged the party to embrace the fact that the campaign had "energised a huge number of people who were previously disengaged from party politics" and unite around their new leader.[125]


Corbyn's rivals for the leadership each reacted to the result. Andy Burnham said that Jeremy Corbyn was a politician with "very deep beliefs, very strong principles" which voters would embrace.[126] Burnham later replaced Yvette Cooper as Shadow Home Secretary after she announced that she would not serve on a Labour frontbench led by Corbyn and that she would instead focus on playing a role in the upcoming EU membership referendum.[127] Following the close of voting, Liz Kendall made a speech reflecting on her campaign stating that, after the New Labour government, there was never any debate in relation to the direction the party should go, and it had created a split "between the party and the country".[128] All three of Corbyn's opponents in the leadership election stated they would support Corbyn, that the result should be accepted and the party should focus on attacking the Conservative government.[129]


During the announcement of Corbyn's victory, Jamie Reed resigned as a Shadow Health Minister, citing his difference in opinion, with the new leader, over the replacement of the Trident missile system. Chris Leslie (Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer), Yvette Cooper (Shadow Home Secretary), Chuka Umunna (Shadow Secretary of State for Business, Innovation and Skills), Rachel Reeves (Shadow Secretary of State for Work and Pensions), Emma Reynolds (Shadow Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government), Tristram Hunt (Shadow Secretary of State for Education), Mary Creagh (Shadow Secretary of State for International Development) and Liz Kendall (Shadow Minister for Care and Older People) also confirmed they would not serve in Corbyn's shadow cabinet.[130][131]


Conservative Party

David Cameron, leader of the Conservative Party and Prime Minister, stated that Corbyn's win would make the Labour Party a threat "to our national security, to our economic security and to the security of your family".[132] This echoed the same warning from other Cabinet ministers, including Michael Fallon, current Secretary of State for Defence,[133] and from an email sent by Conservative Campaign Headquarters to party members. However Nick Hurd, former Minister for Civil Society, and Daniel Hannan, MEP for South East England, both warned their party against "complacency". Ruth Davidson, leader of the Scottish Conservative Party, said that the result demonstrated that Labour had given up on being in government, and that many Labour MPs would show "despair at his appointment".[124]


UK Independence Party

Nigel Farage, leader of the UK Independence Party, congratulated Corbyn but added his concerns about the new Labour leader's immigration policies. Before Corbyn's win, Farage stated that Corbyn's "sweeping emergence on the Left of British politics, where he has helped re-engage many who had given up on politics, is a good thing for our democracy".[134]


Liberal Democrats

Tim Farron, leader of the Liberal Democrats, commented on the "massive space in the centre ground of British politics" that had been opened up, due to the perceived shift leftwards by Labour, and suggested that the Liberal Democrats would be able to appeal more directly to "sensible, moderate, progressives who are opposed to what the Conservatives are doing, but cannot bring themselves to support a party of the hard left".[135] The President of the Liberal Democrats, Sal Brinton, accused Labour of abdicating "its responsibilities" as a party of effective opposition. Willie Rennie, leader of the Scottish Liberal Democrats, said that Corbyn's success meant a "return to the damaging see saw politics of the past".[136]Kirsty Williams, leader of the Welsh Liberal Democrats, attacked Corbyn as the "opposite of what this country needs", accusing Labour of returning to its 1970s policies.[137]


Green Party of England and Wales

Natalie Bennett, leader of the Green Party of England and Wales released a statement saying that her party would be "delighted" to work with Corbyn on a range of issues where they share common ground.[138]


Scottish National Party

Nicola Sturgeon, leader of the Scottish National Party and First Minister of Scotland, praised Corbyn on winning the leadership contest but claimed that Labour's failure to defeat the Conservatives at the next general election would further the cause for Scottish independence and leave the SNP as the only real opposition.[139]


Plaid Cymru

Leanne Wood, leader of Plaid Cymru congratulated Corbyn and urged the Labour Party to join with her party's MPs in opposing "Tory policies that are causing great harm to people in Wales and beyond".[140]


Social Democratic and Labour Party

Alasdair McDonnell, leader of the Social Democratic and Labour Party commended Corbyn on an "incredible election campaign" and urged him to work towards returning Labour to an electable position, as well as opposing Conservative policies.[141]


Ulster Unionist Party

Mike Nesbitt, leader of the Ulster Unionist Party called on Corbyn to maintain Labour's policy towards Northern Ireland and "support agreements brought forward by the local parties".[141]



International




  •  Argentina – Then President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner sent her congratulations to Corbyn, hailing him as "a great friend of Latin America".[142]


  •  Greece – The country's governing party, Syriza, released a statement welcoming the election of Corbyn and arguing that the result would strengthen the "pan-European front against austerity".[143]


  •  Ireland – Gerry Adams, the President of Sinn Féin, tweeted his words of congratulation to Corbyn.[144]


  •  Russia – Alexander Yakovenko, the Russian Ambassador to the United Kingdom, said that he hoped that Corbyn's election would create a "positive change" in the debate around Russia-United Kingdom relations.[145]


  •  Spain – Íñigo Errejón, the Political Secretary of Podemos, described the result as being part of a "wave of change" across Northern Europe.[146]


  •  United States – U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders, a candidate for the Democratic Party's nomination for president in the 2016 U.S. presidential election, announced that he was "delighted to see that the British Labour Party has elected Jeremy Corbyn as its new leader." He added: "We need leadership in every country in the world which tells the billionaire class that they cannot have it all. We need economies that work for working families, not just the people on top."[147]



Analysis


Sveriges Riksbank Nobel memorial prize winning economist Paul Krugman said that it was not surprising that Jeremy Corbyn won the leadership contest, as all the candidates except for Corbyn essentially supported the Conservative government's austerity policies. As Krugman noted, not only the candidates but also the Labour moderates implicitly agreed with their opponents' idea that the government budget should always be balanced by the austerity policies.[148] Krugman argued that it was a false claim that the Labour party, in power during 1997–2010, spent far beyond their means and caused a debt crisis.[148]


Sveriges Riksbank Nobel memorial prize winning economist Joseph Stiglitz argued that the Labour party platform was different from what a leftist party must do, saying that Labour had not opposed austerity programmes.[149] He added that Corbyn's camp offered a left-wing agenda and therefore Stiglitz was not surprised at all that Corbyn became the contender for the leadership contest.[150]



See also



  • Labour Party (UK) deputy leadership election, 2015

  • London Labour Party mayoral selection, 2015

  • Scottish Labour Party leadership election, 2015

  • Liberal Democrats leadership election, 2015

  • Conservative Party (UK) leadership election, 2016

  • Labour Party (UK) leadership election, 2016

  • Political party affiliation in the United Kingdom



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  148. ^ ab Labour’s Dead Center, P. Krugman, The Opinion Pages, The New York Times, 14 Sep 2015


  149. ^ Jeremy Corbyn is favourite for Labour leadership because party has 'wimped out', says Nobel Prize winner Joseph Stiglitz, M. Segalov, The Independent, News, 27 Jul 2015


  150. ^ Joseph Stiglitz: unsurprising Jeremy Corbyn is a Labour leadership contender, T. Macalister, The Guardian, Politics, 26 Jul 2015




External links


Official Website of the Labour Party












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