Top: Rebecca Long-Bailey, John McDonnell, Zarah Sultana and Richard Burgon Bottom: Imran Hussain, Apsana Begum and Ian Byrne |
Keir Starmer sent a clear message on Tuesday that he will not tolerate dissidents, suspending the party whip from seven hard left MPs following a minor rebellion in the Commons. The seven were all from the Socialist Campaign Group of MPs. Of course, when you have a 174 seat majority, one can afford to suspend a fair number - in fact Starmer could have suspended the entire Socialist Campaign Group of 24 MPs if they had all voted accordingly. The seven, who include the likes of John McDonnell and Rebecca Long-Bailey, will remain suspended for six months and sit as independents during that time.
It was an SNP-backed amendment that led to the first rebellion of Starmer's premiership. The amendment demanded an end to the two child benefit cap, introduced by the Tories in 2017. Naturally, those on the left favour a never-ending flow of state handouts to families, regardless of the size and ability to earn a living.
The government won the vote 363-103. The Lib Dems, Greens, Plaid and all the Northern Ireland parties supported the SNP motion. The Conservatives abstained, while 41 Labour MPs abstained or were absent, including eight members of the Socialist Campaign Group - Diane Abbott, Mary Foy, Kim Johnson, Ian Lavery, Andy McDonald, Bell Ribeiro-Addy, Jon Trickett and Nadia Whittome. The remainder of the SCG voted with the government, one of whom tried to con her way out of her 'scabby' vote...
Dawn Butler declared on X that she supported an end to the two child benefit cap, publishing a letter she had written to Liz Kendall, who is now Secretary of State for Work and Pensions. The BBC even erroneously reported that Butler had abstained on the vote. She didn't, her vote is recorded with the noes, alongside SCG comrades (or scabs, as the left might say) Tahir Ali, Olivia Blake, Marsha de Cordova, Clive Lewis, Rachael Maskell, Grahame Morris, Kate Osamor and Kate Osborne. None of these others tried to weasel their way out like Butler tried (and failed, judging by the comments on her post).
This significant three-way split for Labour's hard left will no doubt please centrists like Starmer.
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