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Jeremy Corbyn

British politician
Alternative Title: Jeremy Bernard Corbyn

Jeremy Corbyn, in full Jeremy Bernard Corbyn, (born May 26, 1949, Chippenham, Wiltshire, England), British politician who was leader of the Labour Party (2015– ).

Corbyn attended a grammar school in Shropshire and, briefly, a technical college in north London before pursuing a career as a left-wing political activist. He was elected to a local London council at the age of 25 and soon after began working for the National Union of Public Employees. He was elected to Parliament in the 1983 general election for the safe Labour seat of Islington North, a working-class area close to central London.

As an MP, Corbyn backed every significant left-wing cause, rebelling against his party’s leadership in more than 500 votes in the House of Commons over the next three decades. He was active in campaigns for the United Kingdom to give up its nuclear weapons and to renationalize its railways. He associated with leading members of Sinn Féin, the political arm of the Provisional IRA, and backed its call for a united Ireland. He was a consistent opponent of the Middle East policies supported by successive U.S. and Israeli governments. He also was close to Tony Benn, Labour’s leading left-wing figure in the 1980s and ’90s, and wrote regularly for the small daily communist newspaper Morning Star. Corbyn never sought—and was never offered—any kind of ministerial office during Labour’s 13 years in power (1997–2010) under Prime Ministers Tony Blair and Gordon Brown.

Following the U.K. parliamentary election on May 7, 2015, when the Labour Party lost 26 seats, Ed Miliband resigned as party leader. The party’s rules required would-be candidates to be nominated by 35 MPs (out of Labour’s postelection total of 232), and Corbyn could muster the support of only 20. However, in the hours before the close of nominations on June 15, at least 14 additional MPs who did not endorse Corbyn’s policies or actually want him to win agreed to nominate him in an effort to ensure a wider debate in the leadership contest. His campaign suddenly took off as his uncompromising political outlook inspired many of the party’s supporters. He addressed packed rallies throughout the United Kingdom, often having to repeat his speech outside in the street to hundreds of supporters unable to get into the hall. Corbyn became an unlikely political star and won the leadership with ease, securing 59.5 percent support, three times that of any other candidate.

Corbyn’s first year as leader was bumpy, especially in April 2016 when there were accusations of anti-Semitism among some Labour Party members. Corbyn suspended former London mayor Ken Livingstone for “bringing the party into disrepute” with remarks he made in an interview with the British Broadcasting Corporation. Livingstone’s comments were in response to the earlier suspension of another party member for having posted a message on social media that seemed to support a plan to transport Israelis from Israel to the United States.

In June leading figures in the Labour Party, including former prime minister Tony Blair, called for Corbyn’s replacement as party leader, citing his failure to adequately champion the “Remain” effort in the June 23, 2016, referendum in which British voters decided to remove the United Kingdom from the European Union (EU). On June 28 Labour MPs overwhelmingly backed a no-confidence motion against Corbyn, but he stated that he had no intention to resign as Labour leader.

Both of the principal candidates who emerged to challenge Corbyn for the leadership had resigned from his shadow cabinet in the wake of the Brexit vote: Owen Smith, who stepped down as shadow secretary of state for work and pensions, and Angela Eagle, who left her post as shadow business secretary. Having agreed that only one of them would ultimately face off with Corbyn, they were voted upon in July by Labour members of Parliament and of the European Parliament, and Smith won the support of 88 MPs and 2 MEPs while Eagle reportedly was supported by 63 MPs and 9 MEPs. There followed a roughly two-month campaign, after which party members, affiliated trade union members, and party supporters who paid a £25 fee to participate cast their votes online in the final leadership contest between Corbyn and Smith in September. Corbyn won decisively, taking about 62 percent of the vote to about 38 percent for Smith.

In March 2017 David Cameron’s successor as Conservative Party leader and prime minister, Theresa May, formally invoked Article 50 of the Lisbon Treaty, opening a two-year window for negotiations between the United Kingdom and the EU over the details of separation. May had pledged that she would not call for a snap parliamentary election during the crucial negotiations, but in April—with her party enjoying a significant lead over Labour in public opinion polling and she being desirous of the stronger hand in Brexit negotiations that a greatly enhanced Parliament majority would give her—May called for an early election to be held in June. She sought to focus her campaign on selling her version of “hard Brexit” and contrasting her “strong and stable” leadership with that of Corbyn, whom she portrayed as a wild-eyed leftist extremist.

Not only did a series of unfolding events—including two deadly terrorist attacks that interrupted the campaign—shift the focus of the election to other issues, but also Corbyn proved himself to be a dynamic presence who drew large enthusiastic crowds on the campaign trail. Impassioned but often funny and avuncular too, Corbyn won over waves of new supporters, especially among the young. He also made converts of many who had previously supported the United Kingdom Independence Party’s pursuit of Brexit but, seeing that goal on its way to realization, were now attracted by Corbyn’s hopeful egalitarian message.

Labour’s left-leaning manifesto—which called for free tuition for higher education, renationalization of the railroad and the mail, tax increases for the wealthy, and greater support for the National Health Service and other social services—proved to be surprisingly popular. May’s manifesto, on the other hand, included an immediately controversial provision that called for paying for in-home social care for the elderly through government sales of their homes after their deaths (with only £100,000 from each sale to go to the deceased’s relatives). The outcry over this “dementia tax” was so great that May had to immediately reverse course and propose a cap on the amount of proceeds that the government could claim. In the process, May, who had already shown herself to be stiff and uncertain in campaign appearances, now also appeared, in the eyes of many, to be waffling on policy. Following a pair of terrorist attacks—one at a pop music concert in Manchester in May, in which 22 people were killed by a bomb, and the other on and near London Bridge on June 3, in which eight people were killed by attackers—Corbyn criticized May for having reduced police personnel during her tenure as home secretary in the Cameron government.

Opinion polling began to show a shifting political landscape with the gap between Labour and the Conservatives narrowing. Indeed, in the voting on June 8, Labour vaulted back to electoral relevance, capturing some 40 percent of the popular vote (a percentage that had been good enough to install the Blair-led party in government). In an election that saw the return of the dominance of the two traditional leading parties, the Conservatives took some 42 percent of the popular vote, but it was not distributed in enough of the right constituencies to prevent Labour from gaining 29 seats while the Conservatives dropped at least 12 seats to lose their legislative majority. May sought the support of Northern Ireland’s Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) to establish a minority government that could count on some 328 votes (318 Conservative and 10 DUP members), just two more than the 326 votes required for a majority. Corbyn found himself at the head of an emboldened Labour opposition that counted more than 260 MPs.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica This article was most recently revised and updated by Jeff Wallenfeldt, Manager, Geography and History.

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British politician
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