Defeated Labour MPs and candidates call for ‘fundamental change’ in party’s leadership
A HOST of defeated Labour MPs and candidates have stressed “fundamental change” is needed at the top of the party in the wake of its devastating election defeat.
In a letter to The Observer, the 11-strong group call for an “unflinching” review into what led to the party’s worst defeat in 84 years.
The letter said: "We have been horrified by the damage that Tory government austerity has wreaked in our communities, crippling our NHS, starving our struggling schools and transport networks, normalising street sleeping and failing to keep our streets safe."
"Yet sadly, when it came to polling day, Labour was led to its biggest defeat since 1935.
"We lost seats in every region and nation with a swing against us in every social class - with the biggest swing against us from the poorest people.
"The scale of this defeat means that we have to look unflinchingly at what went wrong, way beyond a simple review, welcome as that might be.
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"We need to be honest about why our outgoing leadership's reflexive anti-western worldview was so unpopular and address the reasons."
The letter from the group, which includes former MPs Mary Creagh, Emma Reynolds and Anna Turley, added: "We are devastated that, across the country, we can no longer help our residents to whom we have devoted ourselves, still struggling under a Tory government.
"It is our duty to speak up now, so that our leadership candidates keep these people at the heart of their campaigns to lead our party."
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