Politics

'We must win or die': Angela Rayner stands for deputy Labour leader


Angela Rayner has said Labour faces the stark challenge of “win or die” after the party’s general election defeat as she officially launched her campaign to become deputy leader.

The shadow education secretary, a close ally of Jeremy Corbyn, is believed to be among the frontrunners to replace Tom Watson.

She called on Labour to unify amid infighting and set out its vision for a “real Britain” after the country leaves the EU. She warned against talking about “revolutionary changes” to the economy, which voters have struggled to believe, and instead said she would encourage the party to take a common sense approach to communicating policy.

Labour leadership

“As a party we face a choice. Win or die. And I fight to win,” she said.

She said she accepted her share of the blame for Labour’s Brexit position that had confused both remainers and leavers, including members of her own family.

“I have to accept responsibility. We all must have to accept some responsibility in the Labour party because we were divided as a party and divided parties do not win general elections.

“Time and time again we had people saying they felt patronised. Members of my family were very angry with me and I couldn’t go to the pub or school gate without someone wanting to tell me about what they thought we were doing.”

She said the party had to draw a line in the sand.

Speaking on Monday at a community centre in the Bridge Hall estate in Stockport, where Rayner grew up and raised her son Ryan after giving birth as a teenager, she said it made her proud to return there to make her pitch.

“I wanted the young girls in particular on this estate to know that they are me, and I am them, and that was so important to me that I came back here and acknowledged the role this estate has had on making me the person I am today,” she said.

Rayner said she would vote for her flatmate, the shadow business secretary, Rebecca Long Bailey, if she decided to run for leader, which she is expected to do in the coming days.

The pair, who both had prominent roles under Corbyn, are expected to form an effective joint ticket to appeal to his supporters and those on the left of the party.

“I will be quite straightforward: I will be voting for my friend Rebecca Long Bailey if she stands for the leadership,” she said.

She explained why she was not standing for leader herself, adding: “It’s not about the position you hold in the party, it’s about bringing the party together.

“I’ve been an organiser all my life and I consider some of my key skills of bringing that unity to our party and taking it forward. I can deal with problems that we face. I can deal with tough questions and I can face down anyone who thinks it’s OK to bully and abuse anyone in our party. I think I can do that as deputy leader.”

“It is no secret for years me and Rebecca Long Bailey have been good friends and I wasn’t going to stand for leader and allow everyone in the media and everyone outside saying ‘who is the better woman?’.”

She said the next five years would be “the fight of our lives” but one the entire Labour movement must tackle head-on.

Her blunt assessment of the party’s campaign at the general election included poor targeting of seats, she said.

“Our targeting was wide of the mark. Seats where we suffered catastrophic defeat were seen as secure. While we tried to fight target seats where we had effectively already lost. It cannot happen again,” she said.

On antisemitism within the Labour party, she said: “The first line in the sand is antisemitism. Cross that line and you are out. Apologies are worthless without action.”

Rayner is being backed by Barry Gardiner, the shadow international trade secretary, which effectively rules him out of running for deputy leader.

“She has a wonderful ability to connect with people, and she is the deputy leader we need to unite and rebuild our party,” he said.

Rayner is also being backed by Sam Tarry, a newly elected Labour MP who led Corbyn’s second leadership campaign in 2016, and who is on the left of the party.

He said: “She’s a committed anti-racist, she’s taken on the BNP, she’s a no-nonsense union organiser, and a straight-talking political streetfighter who can take on the Tories in every seat we’ve lost and ensure we win them back.”

The cross-party support Rayner has gained at this early stage is being seen as a major advantage while other candidates are still ringing around seeking endorsements from colleagues.

Rayner, who left school at 16 without qualifications, went on to be a care worker and representative of the Unison union. She was elected as MP for Ashton-under-Lyne in Greater Manchester in 2015.



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