Angela Rayner defies Keir Starmer to back Diane Abbott as Labour election candidate
Angela Rayner has given Diane Abbott her full backing to run for Parliament in the General election in a dramatic intervention.
It comes as Sir Keir Starmer was forced to deny that he is trying to “purge” the left of the party as the row over Ms Abbott and candidate selections threaten to derail his campaign.
The row appears to have left Labour on the brink of open civil war and handed Rishi Sunak and the Tories an unexpected lifeline as the struggle to close the gap of around 20 points in the polls.
In a blunt response to the last 72 hours of chaos around whether Ms Abbott can stand in Hackney North and Stoke Newington, Ms Rayner appeared to take aim at Sir Keir and his inner circle.
Ms Abbott told supporters she intended to remain as MP for Hackney North and Stoke Newington (Getty Images)
Speaking to ITV, Labour’s deputy leader said: “I don’t see any reason why Diane Abbott can’t stand as a Labour MP going forward. I am saying that as the deputy leader of the Labour Party”.
She described Ms Abbott as a trailblazer adding that she is “not happy” about negative briefings to the papers about her from senior Labour sources.
She said: “I don’t think that is how we should conduct ourselves.”
Ms Rayner then doubled down with comments to Sky News, saying: “[Diane Abbott]’s been an inspiration to many people who see that actually she has been a trailblazer. Now people from her background and people who look like her have a place in our politics. And she’s been able to demonstrate that. You can see the difference on our benches.”
Asked about Sir Keir’s role in the row, she added: “I’m pretty certain that Keir would see that as a frustration because actually Keir is not focused on what’s going on in the Labour Party. He’s focused on what he would do as prime minister and how he will change the country for the better.”
Her intervention comes amid wider questions about the way Starmer’s inner circle appear to be parachuting candidates into winnable seats and blocking ones on the left.
The row escalated last night when leftwing Muslim Faiza Shaheen was blocked from standing against former Tory leader Sir Iain Duncan Smith in Chingford and Woodford Green.
Today it was revealed that a former staffer for Sir Keir Uma Kumaran has been handed the new Stratford seat in east london which has an 82 percent Muslim population.
It has been noted that Labour now has now Muslim candidates in east London after months of criticism of Sir Keir over his position on supporting Israel.
Sir Keir’s chief election strategist and right hand man Morgan McSweeney is being blamed for influencing the party’s National Executive Committee to purge the left and select candidates that the leadership want for key seats
But speaking at a campaign launch in south Wales, Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer insisted he was not purging left-wing candidates and praised Ms Abbott’s political record.
Asked if he was blocking left-wingers from standing, he said: “No. I’ve said repeatedly over the last two years as we’ve selected our candidates that I want the highest-quality candidates.
“That’s been the position for a very long time.”
Speaking to broadcasters in Monmouthshire he said: “The situation in relation to Diane Abbott is that no decision has been taken to bar her and you have to remember that she was a trailblazer as an MP, she overcame incredible challenges to achieve what she achieved in her political career.
“She carved out a path for others to come into politics and she did all that whilst also being one of the most abused MPs across all political parties.
“But I’ve always had the aspiration that we will have the best quality candidates as we go into this election.”
He also said that Ms Shaheen had been barred because of a desire to get “high quality” candidates. But leftwing group momentum posted his messages from ahead of the 2019 election where he described Ms Shaheen as “a fantastic candidate”.
Ms Shaheen retorted: “Please don’t undermine my credentials Keir Starmer I came from a family with a violent father and spent part of my childhood on benefits. I’m now a visiting professor and teach at LSE. Public services really helped me, and I had to work so hard to get to this point in my life.”
Corbyn ally Owen Jones, who has quit Labour in protest over Starmer, leadership, posted: “Keir Starmer previously described Faiza Shaheen as a ‘fantastic candidate’. He now publicly defames her, while standing by candidates who, are among other things, have said racist things and had sexual harassment claims upheld.”
The Labour leader had already had his honesty questioned after friends of Ms Abbott and Tory opponents both pointed out he had claimed last Friday that an investigation into alleged antisemitism on her part was still ongoing. It emerged that the investigation had concluded in December.
Ms Abbott only received the Labour whip back as an MP this week but it was briefed out that she would be “barred” from running as a Labour candidate in the general election.
It had also been suggested that she was planning to retire but at a rally in support of her last night, Ms Abbott declared that she would stand for Parliament again.
Unions have along with Ms Rayner have demanded that Labour and as Sir Keir was speaking in Wales she posted on X (formerly Twitter) to say she has been in talks with unions about standing.
She said: “I am very grateful to all the trade unionists who have offered me support. I have met with a number of leading trade unionists, including general secretaries who have offered me their backing to be a Labour candidate at next week’s NEC.”
She also revealed the cover for her soon to be published memoirs – A Woman Like Me.
Earlier Tory chancellor Jeremy Hunt openly mocked Sir Keir over his inability to deal with his party’s internal issues and suggested it would be a sign of what sort of prime minister he would make.
He said: “How on earth can we expect Keir Starmer to deal Vladimir Putin when he can’t even deal with Diane Abbott.”