Indian-origin MP in race to replace UK Labour leader

Indian-origin MP in race to replace UK Labour leader

The 40-year-old MP won her Wigan seat in the north-west of England, holding on to one of the key bricks in the so-called "red wall"

Aditi KhannaUpdated: Monday, December 16, 2019, 06:27 AM IST
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London: Lisa Nandy, one of the Indian-origin MPs who was re-elected in Thursday's General Election amid a disastrous performance by her Labour Party, on Sunday confirmed plans to throw her hat in the ring to replace party leader Jeremy Corbyn.

The 40-year-old MP won her Wigan seat in the north-west of England, holding on to one of the key bricks in the so-called "red wall" which collapsed as Prime Minister Boris Johnson's Conservative Party won over traditional Labour Party voters across the region.

Corbyn has declared that he would not lead the party into another General Election and is under growing pressure to resign sooner rather than later following Labour's crushing defeat.

"The honest answer is that I am seriously thinking about it," she told the BBC when asked about her leadership plans.

"The reason that I am thinking about it is because we have just had the most shattering defeat where you really felt in towns, like mine, that the earth was quaking and we have watched the entire Labour base just crumble beneath our feet," said Nandy, born in Manchester to a British mother and Indian father.

"We need to think seriously now about first of all how you bring those lifelong Labour voters -- who felt that they not only couldn't vote Labour but actually in many instance chose the Tories -- how you bring Labour home to them," she said.

Nandy, who has held shadow Cabinet positions in the past, took a more backseat role in recent times amid growing criticism of the Corbyn-led faction of the Labour Party.

Some of the others seen as frontrunners for a leadership contest include Labour's shadow Brexit secretary Keir Starmer and Birmingham MP Jess Phillips. And the so-called Corbynista hard Left wing of the party backs Salford MP Rebecca Long-Bailey.

Nandy's declaration comes as Corbyn wrote in two Sunday newspapers to express his apology at the results but has faced attacks for claiming his party had "won the argument" and failing to express humility over the scale of Labour's defeat under his leadership.

Writing in the 'Sunday Mirror' and the 'Observer', Corbyn acknowledged the party's failings in the poll and said he accepted his responsibility for it but made no clear reference to an exit plan.

The Labour leader is expected to stand down early next year.

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