FIVE candidates will battle it out to become the next Labour leader after a dramatic late show of support saw Emily Thornberry scrape through to the next stage of the contest.
The shadow foreign secretary was short of the 22 nominations required to make it through to the last stage of the contest until shortly before the 2.30pm deadline, but finally managed to secure 23.
Shadow Brexit secretary Sir Keir Starmer led the way with 89 nominations, while Rebecca Long-Bailey had 33, Lisa Nandy 31 and Jess Phillips 23.
Shadow Treasury minister Clive Lewis abandoned his own leadership bid on Monday afternoon after acknowledging he stood no chance of making the next round, giving his supporters time to back other candidates.
The candidates to replace Jeremy Corbyn will take part in a series of hustings starting on January 18 – although the party has been criticised by some of the contenders for ignoring parts of the country where Labour support crumbled at the General Election.
I have written to the Party asking that it makes a firm commitment to hold leadership and deputy leadership hustings in each region and nation we seek to represent.
— Keir Starmer (@Keir_Starmer) January 13, 2020
I am inviting the other contenders in both contests to sign up to this letter. pic.twitter.com/3gYVHs2AZt
Sir Keir said he was “disappointed” debates would not be held in the South East, east of England or Yorkshire – where Labour lost several key seats.
Nandy said Labour had lost seats in Bolsover, Wrexham and Stoke and “the failure to debate the future of our party in communities like these shows that we are part of the problem”.
We’ve just lost seats in communities from Blyth Valley to Delyn and Stroud to Coatbridge
— Lisa Nandy (@lisanandy) January 13, 2020
We must hold hustings about the future of our party in the communities we have to reconnect with to win again.
Sign our petition here:https://t.co/I0VvsqPFOE
Hustings for the leader and deputy leader elections kick off in Liverpool, with events planned each weekend in cities including Durham, Bristol, Cardiff, Nottingham, Glasgow and London.
There will also be hustings in the West Midlands and Bedford.
In the race for deputy leader, which is running in parallel with the contest for the top job, three more candidates successfully went through on Monday.
Rosena Allin-Khan, Richard Burgon and Dawn Butler reached the magic number of 22 with only hours to spare before the deadline.
They join shadow education secretary Angela Rayner and Ian Murray in progressing to the next round.
Candidates in both races now need to get the nominations of 33 local constituency parties or three Labour affiliates, including at least two trade unions, to enter the final postal ballot of party members and registered supporters.
Over the weekend, the left-wing activist group Momentum, which helped propel Corbyn to the leadership in 2015, said it was recommending support for Long-Bailey and Rayner.
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