Factionalism in the Parliamentary Labour Party and the 2015 leadership contest.
Pemberton, Hugh ; Wickham-Jones, Mark
Close analysis of the nominations for Labour's leader and
deputy reveals a parliamentary party fracturing along sharper
ideological lines than were evident in 2010.
What do nominations for the posts of Labour leader and deputy
leader tell us about the state of the party? Do they suggest the
existence of different ideological and political groupings within
Labour? Or is there a more general and diffuse distribution to
endorsements? Under the Collins reforms to the party's structure,
voted on and passed by a special conference in March 2014, those wishing
to be candidates for either leadership post need to be publicly
nominated by 15 per cent of Labour Members of Parliament (MPs) in the
House of Commons (Collins, 2014). Any viable contender for the post
needed to mobilise sufficient support to meet that threshold. In the
case of the two 2015 contests, with a Parliamentary Labour Party (PLP)
of 232 MPs, the threshold was 35. By the time nominations closed for the
leadership at 12.00 noon on Monday 15 June 2015, four candidates had
made the final ballot: Andy Burnham, Yvette Cooper, Jeremy Corbyn, and
Liz Kendall. When nominations closed two days later for the deputy
leadership, five aspirants had made it: Ben Bradshaw, Stella Creasy,
Angela Eagle, Caroline Flint, and Tom Watson.
In this article, we examine nominations for the leadership and
deputy leadership in 2015 to evaluate what they reveal about the state
of the Labour Party. In particular, we ask whether patterns in
nominations reveal the existence of ideological divisions within the
party. Do discrete factions exist within the PLP? By faction, we do not
mean an organised structured grouping with a distinct internal
institutional framework and rules of membership. Rather we see factions
as clusters of MPs sharing a similar political and ideological outlook
whilst acting, for the most part, in a collectively consistent manner.
In the first part of the article we look at how voting in the 2010
Labour leadership aligned with nominations for the two contests in 2015.
We then go on to examine potential groupings between the supporters of
the different candidates for the posts of leader and deputy. We compare
and contrast the configuration of nominations between the two contests
to determine whether particular groupings endorsed different candidates
for each. Last, we consider the possible ideological basis of any
clusters. We look at the roles that a close identification with
Labour's affiliated unions, including financial contributions to an
MP's constituency on the one hand, and the role of Progress, as an
internal group within the party on the other, may have had in shaping
distinct and contrasting ideological orientations.
The alignment between the 2010 Labour leadership contest and the
2015 leadership election
Following the outcome of the 2015 general election, 165 Labour MPs
who took part in the 2010 leadership contest remained in the House of
Commons (along side two colleagues who had not voted--Harriet Harman and
Nick Brown). How did their nominations in 2015 compare to their first
choice votes in 2010 and can we detect evidence that those nominations
indicate that factionalism has become more significant since 2010?
What do we learn from the nominations detailed in Table 2? Such
endorsements are clearly an important public statement. However, they
need interpreting with some care. Nominations need not reflect direct
ideological alignment (MPs might support a colleague for personal
reasons). In particular, some of the support offered to Jeremy Corbyn,
standing on an anti-austerity ticket, needs to be assessed with caution.
A late and rather reluctant entrant to the contest, joining the other
aspirants on 3 June 2015, Corbyn struggled to meet the 35 MPs threshold
and did so only a few moments before nominations closed: manifestly a
number of those supporting him did so to assist him in making the ballot
and not because they endorsed his political position. Nominations had
opened on Tuesday 9 June but by Friday 12 June, four days later, Corbyn
had less than half the number needed: the remaining endorsements, many
coming on the Monday morning immediately before nominations closed at
noon, 15 June, may be artificial. (However, in contrast to the 2010
contest, MPs were not allowed to revoke a nomination and reallocate it
unless the nominee formally withdrew from the contest: Labour Party,
2015b, clause B14).
Noting these broad points, a number of details are worth noting
from Table 2. First, the importance of David Miliband's supporters
for Liz Kendall's 2015 campaign is manifest. Nearly 70 per cent of
all of those nominating Kendall (returning MPs and new entrants alike)
had voted for David as their first choice candidate in 2010 and if we
restrict the analysis to those who had voted in the earlier contest, the
proportion was higher still at around 75 per cent.
Second, support for the other candidates in 2015 appears to be more
diffuse amongst those who had expressed their opinion in 2010. Only 11
MPs survived who had given Andy Burnham their first choice in 2010: he
held on to nine of them in nominations for 2015. But Burnham also picked
up support from those who voted for Ed Balls and Ed Miliband as their
first preferences in 2010. Clearly Burnham's position has been
transformed from that of a rather weak 'also ran' campaigning
largely on the basis of his local roots in 2010 to that of frontrunner
by 2015 (see discussion in R. J. Johnston et al., 2015a). Relatively few
of David Miliband's advocates endorsed Burnham five years later.
Third, the biggest group backing Cooper's campaign came from
those who had voted for Ed Balls, her husband, as first choice in 2010.
At 80 per cent, a bigger proportion of Balls's supporters remained
in the Commons than with the other 2010 candidates (though, not of
course, the candidate himself). Nearly half of these, 15 out of 32,
backed Cooper. She also picked up support from those who had backed
David and Ed Miliband as well as Ed Balls.
Fourth, discounting Jeremy Corbyn's nominations from the last
day or so, the picture of support for him is as follows. All of those
remaining MPs who voted for Abbott as first choice in 2010 nominated him
(just four in total). He picked up a further five who voted for Ed
Miliband, alongside one each who voted for Ed Balls, Andy Burnham and
David Miliband.
The overall pattern thus suggests a degree of ideological
consistency. In 2010 a YouGov/ Sunday Times poll asked the party members
to place the then Labour leadership candidates on a left right scale
running from -100 (very left-wing politics) to 0 (centre) and on to 100
(very right-wing politics). The members placed Abbott at -66, and David
Miliband at -2. Between these outliers, they put Burnham at -32, Ed
Miliband at -31 and Balls at -28 (see Quinn, 2012, 74-5). Tony Blair was
located at +9. Labour-affiliated trade unionists gave a similar
distribution, though Ed Miliband and Balls shared a position at -23. At
the time of writing, the 2015 campaign lacks such polling data to locate
candidates in terms of their ideological position. However, at the start
of the contest, press commentators and others were quick to define
Kendall as a moderniser on the right of the party: that is, in some way
or other, as a Blairite candidate (see, for example, Merrick, 2015;
LabourList, 2015a and Chakelian, 2015a). They identified Burnham as a
candidate on the left of the party, one able to attract support from
Labour's trade union affiliates. They suggested that Cooper located
herself as a more centrist candidate in ideological terms. Jeremy Corbyn
entered the contest explicitly as an anti-austerity candidate adopting a
strong, left-wing line against any further cuts in public spending and
claiming to be 'standing to give Labour Party members a voice'
(LabourList, 2015b).
There is, accordingly, some ideological consistency across Labour
within these positions in how support has transferred from first choice
voting in 2010 to nominations in 2015. The same point can be made by
analysing how David and Ed Miliband's support divided up five years
later: as we have seen, the biggest chunk of David's votes went to
Liz Kendall. Ed's support split largely between Burnham and Cooper.
Relatively little of it went to Liz Kendall.
A last point concerns the 65 MPs who nominated for the first time
in 2015 without having voted in the previous election. Liz Kendall
performed very weakly among this group, picking up only six supporters.
By contrast, Jeremy Corbyn performed proportionately very well among new
MPs, picking up six of his first 17 supporters from the 2015 intake.
Mary Creagh, who withdrew as a candidate from the race on Friday 12
June, also did well among this group. When she pulled out she had only
10 nominations. Apart from her own, she had only one other nomination
from someone who had played any part in the 2010 contest.
2010 votes and 2015 nominations for the deputy leadership
As with the leadership, nominations for Labour's deputy leader
(see Table 3 below) need to be interpreted with care. Seven candidates
declared their intention to run for the post. One, John Healey, pulled
out a few days after nominations opened. On the morning that nominations
closed only two of the six remaining candidates had met the threshold.
At this point, one of the four, Rushanara Ali, withdrew to free up
support for the others. With frantic lobbying, the remaining three all
made it over the threshold, though none of them by much. As with
Corbyn's leadership bid, some nominations seemed unlikely to be
indicative either of ideological alignment or of a broadly consistent
political outlook. Diane Abbott, the left's candidate for leader in
2010, nominated Stella Creasy, generally perceived as being on the right
of the party, as deputy. The nominations for the deputy leadership,
however, may have been less manipulated than those for Corbyn for the
leadership to the extent that some MPs may have waited until the last
minute before nominating to see who would be the most viable of the
remaining candidates.
Table 3 indicates some patterns of support within the PLP for those
seeking the deputy leadership from those who had voted in 2010. Tom
Watson received most nominations: he took a block of support from those
who had voted for Ed Balls in 2010, but also received endorsements from
the backers of both David and Ed Miliband. Angela Eagle also received a
diffuse range of backing. Ben Bradshaw's nominations came mainly
from David and Ed Miliband. Support for the remaining two candidates,
Stella Creasy and Caroline Flint, came largely from David Miliband.
How do these nominations map on to the candidates' ideological
positions? As with the leadership, at the time of writing, no polls have
been published regarding ideological alignment. Press commentators and
blogs offer preliminary, if slightly basic, assessments of Angela Eagle
and Tom Watson as being on the left of the party (the latter attracting
support from the affiliated unions), while they locate Ben Bradshaw,
Stella Creasy and Caroline Flint on the right (see, for example,
Chakelian, 2015b; and LabourList, 2015c). Stella Creasy is one of only
two MPs on the national committee of the Movement for Change, an
organisation promoting community level interventions, founded as part of
David Miliband's 2010 leadership bid. The pattern of nominations
for deputy leader is broadly consistent with this ideological
characterisation. Watson picked up support from Ed Balls and Ed Miliband
(though those who voted for David Miliband also nominated him).
Eagle's support was broadly similar. In keeping with their apparent
location toward the right of the party, Creasy and Flint both received
strong support from erstwhile backers of David Miliband and relatively
little from elsewhere. Bradshaw's backing came from David and Ed
Miliband: given his apparent position on the party's right, the
support for him coming from those who voted for Ed Miliband is perhaps
surprising. An outgoing member of the Labour Cabinet in 2010, he failed
to gain a place in the Shadow Cabinet elections of October that year and
subsequently remained on the backbenches for the remainder of the
2010-15 parliament.
In sum, the two biggest correlations between first preference votes
in 2010 and deputy leadership nominations in 2015 were for Flint from
David Miliband's backers and for Watson from Ed Balls's
supporters. The pattern is somewhat different for those who had not
taken part in the 2010 contest. Watson and Creasy performed most
strongly among this group; Flint was relatively weak, picking up only
six of her 43 nominations.
Clusters in 2015
Are there clusters within the nominations for leader and deputy
leader in 2015? Did those who favoured a certain leadership contestant
tend to favour a particular candidate for the post of deputy? We examine
this material in Table 4 below.
The data in Table 4 indicate the wide range of different possible
permutations for leader and deputy leader. Clearly nominations were
diffused across the PLP. Of the twenty possible combinations, only one
pairing receives no support at all: unsurprisingly so, in that it is the
unlikely pairing of Jeremy Corbyn as leader with Caroline Flint as
deputy. The three largest groupings are Burnham/Watson (10 per cent of
the total), Cooper/Watson (9 per cent) and Kendall/Flint (8 per cent).
These clusters of support can be noted taking each candidate for the
post of deputy in turn.
Ben Bradshaw's support comes mainly from those backing Yvette
Cooper and Jeremy Corbyn. Of the candidates in the deputy election,
Bradshaw's base of nominations appears quite surprising. Identified
as being on the right of the party, he did not attain much of the
backing that had gone to Liz Kendall for the leadership. We discuss this
point further below. It might be noted that much of the support he
received from those who had backed Corbyn came from individuals who
nominated both at the last minute. Bradshaw received 16 nominations in
the last day or so before the lists closed. Six of the ten MPs who
nominated both Corbyn and Bradshaw did so in the last 24 hours of this
phase of each contest. Endorsements for Stella Creasy, as we might
expect given her ideological outlook, come mainly from those backing Liz
Kendall for the leadership. Again, consistent with their political
positions, Angela Eagle attracted support from those who had endorsed
Andy Burnham. The biggest group backing Caroline Flint came from Liz
Kendall. Tom Watson had two large clusters of support, one that had
backed Andy Burnham and one that had backed Yvette Cooper. Looking at
the data, the degree of ideological consistency, especially on
Labour's right, is striking. Liz Kendall's support went to
Creasy and Flint. Equally striking is the lack of support offered to
Kendall/Watson, a combination preferred by only two MPs out of 232.
Focusing on support amongst the 2015 intake, the biggest clusters
are those for Cooper/Watson (13 per cent of the total), Burnham/Watson
and Corbyn/Watson (both 11 per cent). What is perhaps most noteworthy
about those MPs newly elected in 2015 is how little support Liz Kendall
attracted from them--just three in total--and how much Tom Watson
received. The Kendall/Flint combination falls from 8 per cent of the PLP
to just 2 per cent of the 2015 intake.
The ideological sources of factions within the PLP: the role of
Labour's affiliated unions and Progress
This analysis of nominations indicates factional clustering within
the party, but are there institutional characteristics to those factions
that indicate an ideological underpinning to them? Much has been made in
the press over the last five years or so of the arguments within Labour
between the party's trade unions, most notably Unite, the largest
affiliate, on the one hand, and Progress, an internal grouping, on the
other. Founded in 1996, Progress is usually presented as an internal
grouping within Labour, one loyal to Tony Blair's leadership. For a
long period, it characterised itself as a New Labour pressure group. In
2014, it dropped the New Labour moniker and described itself as a
mainstream grouping within the party. Jackie Ashley, the Guardian
columnist described Progress as 'the inner bastion of
Blairism', articulating a position based around free markets and
centrist thinking (Ashley, 2012). Such an orientation brought Progress
into conflict with Labour's affiliated unions such as Unite and the
GMB. Blogging after the election defeat, Richard Angell, Director of
Progress, defended Labour's link with the unions. At the same time,
however, he criticised the internal structure of Unite and the authority
it accorded Len McCluskey as general secretary, the union's threat
to withdraw funding from Labour if it did not get its own way, and the
idea that Labour MPs should be 'centrally chosen trade union
officials, "rewarded" for their service with a safe seat'
(Angell, 2015). His comments were typical of a long running feud. In
2012, Paul Kenny, general secretary of the GMB, proposed that Labour
should ban Progress (Wintour, 2012). Dave Prentis of Unison followed
this up, suggesting it was 'a party within a party, funded by
external interests' (Milmo, 2012). What bearing might such a
disagreement have had on nominations for the two 2015 leadership
contests?
There are, of course, a number of ways in which members of the
Parliamentary Labour Party might be involved in trade union activities.
The three largest unions affiliated to Labour (Unite, Unison and the
GMB), all reported as being at odds with Progress, have sponsored more
than 50 meetings at the Labour conference over the last five years. Many
such events focus on leading figures within the unions, although around
twenty-five current Labour MPs have spoken at these meetings. Care needs
to be taken, however, aligning individuals directly with the union
organising any meetings. Shadow ministers might wish to speak to their
portfolio, others may participate on the basis of links with any group
co-sponsoring a meeting. Union interests have varied widely, including
some foreign policy concerns (for example, Cuba or Palestine), but are
often focused on economic matters. Some Labour MPs also blog as members
of the Parliamentary Labour Party trade union group. Following the 2015
election two statements were published defending the role of organised
labour within the party: ten MPs wrote to the Guardian in mid-May
followed by a statement defending the union link published in the New
Statesman at the end of that month (see respectively Burgon et al.,
2015; Lavery et al., 2015).
Taking these activities together, we get a total of around 60
Labour MPs engaging in trade union activities, something like a quarter
of the Parliamentary Labour Party. There is some overlap with those who
have taken part in Progress events: around a quarter have done so,
although only around six MPs appear to have been active at union events
while being frequent participants within Progress (and some of these
have spoken only once on the conference fringe at a union meeting). All
four candidates for the leadership have spoken at the Labour conference
on trade union platforms (Jeremy Corbyn on Cuba some years ago). Liz
Kendall took part in a Unison meeting on social care (her frontbench
portfolio); Caroline Flint, running for the deputy, participated in a
discussion of local government (again linked to her portfolio) for the
same union. Of the candidates for the deputy neither Ben Bradshaw nor
Stella Creasy appear to have been involved in a union event.
Of those MPs that have such links to the three large affiliates,
most nominated Corbyn (around one third) or Burnham (again, around a
third) for the leadership. Eleven supported Cooper while six did not
nominate. For the deputy, Watson got most nominations with 27. Eagle
received support from 16 of these MPs. Six did not nominate and five
plumped for Bradshaw. The candidate most associated with Progress, Liz
Kendall, got just two nominations from this group (her own and that of
Alison McGovern). For the deputy contest, Creasy got two nominations and
Flint three. Of course, such figures must be read with care but they
suggest an antipathy amongst MPs with trade union connections for the
Kendall/Creasy/ Flint candidatures.
Another means by which a trade union alignment within the PLP might
be identified is through the financial contributions that organised
labour might make to an MP's Constituency Labour Party, on the
basis that a trade union will be more likely to support an MP who is of
a similar ideological outlook. Plainly, the trade unions are an
extremely significant source of finance for Labour. Between the start of
2011 and the 2015 general election they contributed over 45 million
[pounds sterling] to the party, with nearly 6 million [pounds sterling]
donated in the first quarter of 2015 alone, as the Labour geared up for
the forthcoming general election (Electoral Commission, 2015). Is there
any correlation between union finance provided at the constituency level
between the 2010 and 2015 general elections and the nominations made
during the 2015 leadership contest? Data on such contributions is made
available by the Electoral Commission. It is not easy to work with, not
least because many contributions are made to umbrella constituency
committees, mainly in the major conurbations. For our purposes, however,
donations recorded as made directly to the constituency are the
significant factor, and these can be identified (see Table 5). Across
all unions there is a small correlation evident between union donations
to CLPs whose MP went on to nominate either Burnham or Corbyn. The
latter CLPs received on average 5,657 [pounds sterling] and 5,934
[pounds sterling] respectively from trade unions between the 2010
general election and the end of March 2015, compared with 3564[pounds
sterling] and 4552 [pounds sterling] respectively for those whose MPs
backed either Kendall or Cooper. There was little sign of any
relationship in deputy leadership nominations, although unions tended to
favour CLPs with MPs supporting Eagle and, perhaps more surprisingly,
disfavour those whose MP backed Watson. It is also striking how little
financial support has been forthcoming on average for those
constituencies whose MPs backed both Kendall and Flint (though Kendall
and Watson, backed by only two, is also low).
The data shown in Table 5, however, relate to all union
contributions. If we restrict the analysis, as shown in Table 6, to
Unite donations to Labour constituencies the preference of that union
for Burnham and Corbyn for leader, and for Watson and Eagle for deputy
leader, is plain. Equally clear is what little financial support those
MPs who have backed Kendall as well as Creasy have received from Unite.
Of course correlation is not causation, and whilst there are variations
in the average donations those averages are not high. Our purpose here
is merely to demonstrate a potential relationship between unions and
factionalism within the Parliamentary Labour Party. The clear alignment
of Unite donations to MPs backing leadership candidates at different
points on the left of the party and the very marked lack of union
backing for MPs backing Kendall is notable, with Cooper lying between
the two. Likewise, we can see a clear alignment between Unite and MPs
backing Watson and Eagle for the deputy leadership, and a clear lack of
engagement with MPs backing Creasy and to a lesser extent Flint and
Bradshaw.
What about Progress? In one sense, Progress is more open and
pluralist than some of its critics have suggested. Looking at the
readily accessible data on the Progress website, coupled with additional
material from Labour conferences, it can be seen that a plethora of
members of the PLP have participated in Progress activities over the
last five years. Progress holds an annual gathering in London as well as
a range of open events at the Labour conference each year. In addition
to these set piece occasions it has organised political weekends, and
regional conferences, alongside a range of themed seminars. Progress
publishes a monthly magazine and periodic pamphlets: perhaps most
significantly in this regard, in 2011, Robert Philpot, the then director
of Progress, edited The Purple Book, a collection of essays addressing
what kind of measures and general orientation Labour might adopt in
order to win the next general election (Philpot, 2011).
Aggregating this data, we find that around 80 MPs, something like
35 per cent of the PLP, have taken part in Progress events in the last
five years. (Of those 80, around 15 have taken part in a union event:
only one of the 32 MPs who signed either of the statements defending the
union link appears to have spoken at a Progress event). On the face of
it, these MPs represent all sides in the current leadership contest: Liz
Kendall has been especially active but Diane Abbott has spoken at a
number of Progress meetings, as has Andy Burnham and Yvette Cooper
(though not Jeremy Corbyn). Among the candidates for deputy, Ben
Bradshaw, Stella Creasy, Angela Eagle and Caroline Flint have all taken
part in Progress activities (Creasy and Flint have been especially
active). Tom Watson does not appear to have done so at all.
A rather different picture emerges, however, if we look at the MPs
most involved with Progress in terms of the extent of their
participation alongside those that hold office within it. Taking MPs
with more than five entries or activities on the Progress web-site over
the last five years alongside a handful of office holders, we get a
total of 28. Eight of these MPs did not take part in the 2010 leadership
contest. Of the remainder, sixteen out of twenty backed David as their
first choice in 2010. Two chose Ed Miliband, one supported Balls, and
Andy Burnham voted, unsurprisingly, for Burnham. In the nomination stage
of the 2015 contests, of the 28, over 60 per cent have backed Kendall
(18 in total). Two did not nominate (candidates for the deputy
leadership), three backed Cooper, and five Burnham.
For the deputy leadership, nominations among the leading members of
Progress are more diffuse. Stella Creasy leads this group with 11
nominations, though at least one of these came late. Caroline Flint is
second with seven, Watson received support from six MPs, with Eagle and
Bradshaw getting two and one each respectively (all three coming late in
the process). Of those that nominated Kendall as leader, all went on to
back either Creasy or Flint, with the exception of Kendall herself (who
did not nominate) and Gloria De Piero and Nick Smith, both of whom
backed Tom Watson for deputy (they were the only members of the PLP to
choose such a combination). The lack of backing from senior figures in
Progress may reflect one reason why Bradshaw, although identified as
being on the right of the party, struggled to get on the ballot. These
active Progress members split their support between Creasy and Flint.
Bradshaw, who has had relatively little involvement with Progress, had
to look elsewhere for nominations. Andy Burnham's participation in
a relatively high number of Progress events looks slightly anomalous: a
number of these contributions were at events directly related to his
health portfolio in the shadow cabinet; some of the others were
North-West based meetings.
Conclusion
In this article we have examined nominations by Labour MPs for the
party's leadership and deputy leadership in 2015. We have compared
these with the recorded first preference votes for the leadership in
2010 and we have looked for clusters across the endorsements for the
elections in 2015. While we have focused on ideological issues, other
analyses of such data would be possible. There is, for example, clearly
a regional aspect to nominations: Andy Burnham has garnered much support
in his home North-West while Yvette Cooper has picked up nominations
from the Birmingham area (see Johnston et al., 2015b).
From the above discussion, we draw the following conclusions.
First, we suggest that there is a broad degree of ideological
consistency in the clusters that we have identified within the 2015
nominations. Nine MPs voted for Ed Balls in 2010 and then went on to
nominate Cooper and Watson in 2015. 14 MPs voted for David Miliband and
then endorsed Kendall and Flint while a further eight backed David
Miliband and then went on to nominate Kendall and Creasy. In a PLP of
232, these are significant groupings. Our analysis of union donations to
Constituency Labour Parties confirms the potential for an ideological
divide within Labour, as does our analysis of MPs' activities
within trade unions and within Progress. Although many commentators
assume that the present ideological divisions within the PLP were
clearly evident in the 2010 leadership contest, our analysis of factions
amongst Labour MPs reveals a fundamental shift in the ideological
landscape of the Parliamentary Labour Party since 2010. In fact, it was
not immediately apparent that the 2010 leadership election indicated an
ideological schism within the party (Pemberton and Wickham-Jones, 2013;
see also Bale, 2015; Hasan and MacIntyre, 2012). Many MPs at that time
ranked both David and Ed Miliband high within their preference orderings
(and at the same time that party members voted for David Miliband as
leader many within London voted for Ken Livingstone as Mayoral
candidate). Pragmatism rather than ideology appeared to shape such
contests. Since 2010 the apparent schism between David and Ed Miliband
appears to have hardened into a more fundamental division.
Second, although the 'hard' left's candidate, Jeremy
Corbyn, struggled to make the necessary threshold to be on the ballot
paper, he did attract support from the handful of MPs remaining in the
Commons who had voted for Dianne Abbott in 2010 alongside a group of new
members of the PLP. Although the Campaign Group of MPs, greatly reduced
in size from what was once the case, is organised on loose lines, these
nominations indicate the existence of a 'hard' left group,
albeit small within the PLP. In May 2015, ten new MPs wrote to the
Guardian calling for an alternative to austerity: seven went on to
nominate Corbyn (though three of these were delivered just before the
deadline) and three backed Burnham (Burgon et al., 2015). Of those
writing to the New Statesman, twelve backed Corbyn (Lavery et al.,
2015).
Third, the pattern of support tracked from votes for David Miliband
to nominations for Liz Kendall as leader and for Caroline Flint and
Stella Creasy as deputy reveals a strong cluster on the ideological
right of the PLP. The number of nominations does not indicate that such
a grouping enjoys majority support among the PLP. It does suggest,
however, that Labour is a factionalised party with an ideologically
coherent minority grouping located on its right. Whether this grouping
will continue to recruit new members in the future is uncertain. Indeed
the candidates most associated with the party's right (Liz Kendall,
Caroline Flint, and perhaps even Stella Creasy) have not done well
attracting support from new MPs. This may reflect the old adage that MPs
become de-radicalised and shift to the centre over time, or it may be
representative of a lasting realignment within the PLP.
Fourth, Andy Burnham appears to have relocated himself successfully
as a candidate with strong support from those who voted for Ed Miliband
in 2010. With such an orientation he has attracted considerable support
from MPs backed by the trade unions and by Unite in particular. On 4
June 2015, Burnham declared a 3,000[pounds sterling] donation from Unite
to his CLP, going on to state that it was used to fund his general
election campaign and not his bid for the Labour leadership (BBC, 2015).
(Earlier Burnham had sought to place some distance between the trade
unions and his leadership campaign, stating that he would take no
contributions from them: Wintour and Mason, 2015).
None of this analysis is especially good news for the Labour Party.
One of the key tasks of whoever is elected leader in September 2015 will
be to unite the party around an agreed strategy that bonds its different
elements together at the same time as appealing to sufficient numbers
within the electorate to win the next general election. On the basis of
the groupings emerging in the patterns of nominations, that is by no
means a straightforward task. The candidates for the Labour leadership
have articulated different ideological perspectives about how the party
might best recover electorally and politically: these positions are
indicative of different ideological alignments within the Parliamentary
Labour Party and of factions with an institutional presence that may
make them tenacious. The post-New Labour contest is only just beginning.
Hugh Pemberton is Reader in Contemporary British History in the
Department of History at the University of Bristol.
Mark Wickham-Jones is Professor of Political Science in the School
of Sociology, Politics and International Studies at the University of
Bristol.
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Table 1: Nominations for leader and deputy leader, Labour Party, 2015
Leader Deputy leader
Nominations Nominations
Andy Burnham 68 Ben Bradshaw 37
Yvette Cooper 59 Stella Creasy 35
Jeremy Corbyn 36 Angela Eagle 38
Liz Kendall 41 Caroline Flint 43
Tom Watson 62
Did not nominate 28 Did not nominate 17
Source: Labour Party, 2015a
Table 2: Final nominations for Labour Party leader, June
2015, and first choice votes in 2010
DA EB AB
Andy Burnham 0 11 9
Yvette Cooper 0 15 0
Jeremy Corbyn 4 (4) 2 (1) 1 (1)
Liz Kendall 0 2 1
Did not nominate 0 2 0
DM EM DNP
Andy Burnham 7 16 25
Yvette Cooper 13 12 18
Jeremy Corbyn 6 (1) 9 (5) 14 (6)
Liz Kendall 28 4 6
Did not nominate 17 6 2
Notes: figures in parentheses give
Corbyn's support before the final 24
hours of nominations; DNP--did not
participate (joined Commons since
2010); Cooper's fi gure does not
include Nick Brown, who did not
vote as chief whip in 2010; Harriet
Harman, who did not vote in 2010 or
nominate in 2015, is not included.
Source: Labour Party, 2015a
Table 3: Final nominations for the deputy leadership, 2015 and
first choice votes in 2010
DA EB AB DM EM DNP
Ben Bradshaw 0 5 2 12 12 6
Stella Creasy 1 1 0 12 4 17
Angela Eagle 2 7 2 7 8 11
Caroline Flint 0 1 4 23 9 6
Tom Watson 0 16 2 10 10 24
Did not nominate 1 2 1 7 4 1
Notes: Angela Eagle's nominations
do not include Nick Brown,
Chief Whip in 2010; Harriet
Harman is not included.
Source: Labour Party, 2015a
Table 4: Nominations for leadership by nominations for
deputy leadership, 2015
Bradshaw Creasy Eagle
Burnham 6 7 14
Cooper 13 5 10
Kendall 4 12 4
Corbyn 10 7 8
No nomination 4 4 2
Flint Watson No
nomination
Burnham 16 24 1
Cooper 6 22 3
Kendall 18 2 1
Corbyn 0 10 1
No nomination 3 4 11
Source: Labour Party, 2015a
Table 5: Nominations for leader and deputy leader by value
of average union CLP contribution per nominator, 2010-15
Bradshaw Creasy
Burnham 3,000 [pounds sterling] 5,480 [pounds sterling]
Cooper 6,566 [pounds sterling] 7,000 [pounds sterling]
Kendall 2,281 [pounds sterling] 4,881 [pounds sterling]
Corbyn 6,892 [pounds sterling] 4,609 [pounds sterling]
All 4,902.96 [pounds sterling] 4,691.22 [pounds sterling]
Eagle Flint
Burnham 6,179 [pounds sterling] 6,129 [pounds sterling]
Cooper 3,715 [pounds sterling] 4,498 [pounds sterling]
Kendall 6,111 [pounds sterling] 2,756 [pounds sterling]
Corbyn 6,344 [pounds sterling] 0 [pounds sterling]
All 5,232.87 [pounds sterling] 4,061.80 [pounds sterling]
Watson All
Burnham 5,504 [pounds sterling] 5,567 [pounds sterling]
Cooper 3,109 [pounds sterling] 4,552 [pounds sterling]
Kendall 2,175 [pounds sterling] 3,564 [pounds sterling]
Corbyn 4,946 [pounds sterling] 5,934 [pounds sterling]
All 4,101.72 [pounds sterling]
Source: Electoral Commission, 2015
Table 6: Nominations for leader and deputy leader by value of
average Unite CLP contribution per nominator, 2010-15
Bradshaw Creasy
Burnham 500 [pounds sterling] 1,000 [pounds sterling]
Cooper 577 [pounds sterling] 200 [pounds sterling]
Kendall 250 [pounds sterling] 217 [pounds sterling]
Corbyn 1,567 [pounds sterling] 521 [pounds sterling]
All 750.67 [pounds sterling] 407.14 [pounds sterling]
Eagle Flint
Burnham 2,605 [pounds sterling] 1,156 [pounds sterling]
Cooper 980 [pounds sterling] 1,250 [pounds sterling]
Kendall 750 [pounds sterling] 254 [pounds sterling]
Corbyn 375 [pounds sterling] 0 [pounds sterling]
All 1,493.79 [pounds sterling] 710.93 [pounds sterling]
Watson All
Burnham 1,929 [pounds sterling] 1,702 [pounds sterling]
Cooper 1,227 [pounds sterling] 971 [pounds sterling]
Kendall 750 [pounds sterling] 309 [pounds sterling]
Corbyn 2,563 [pounds sterling] 1,415 [pounds sterling]
All 1,835.02 [pounds sterling]
Source: Electoral Commission, 2015