Britain's Labour in turmoil as Corbyn sacks key member

Benn was rallying party members to resign if the Labour leader refused to stand down

June 26, 2016 01:45 pm | Updated October 18, 2016 01:03 pm IST

British Shadow Foreign Secretary Hilary Benn.

British Shadow Foreign Secretary Hilary Benn.

Britain's opposition leader Jeremy Corbyn sacked a key member of his cabinet early Sunday, the BBC reported, as deep divisions within the Labour party emerged following the Brexit vote.

Mr. Corbyn had joined Conversative Prime Minister David Cameron to campaign for Britain to remain part of the European Union.

Mr. Cameron was the first casualty of the loosing "Remain" camp, stepping down as leader on Friday morning after it emerged that Britain had voted 52 per cent to 48 per cent in favour of leaving the EU.

In the early hours of Sunday, Mr. Corbyn dismissed shadow foreign secretary Hilary Benn, who was rallying party members to resign if the Labour leader refused to stand down.

A Labour spokesman said Mr. Corbyn had "lost confidence" in Mr. Benn, the BBC reported.

Two Labour lawmakers had tabled a vote of no confidence against the opposition leader on Saturday, reflecting the anger felt by many MPs as the results of Britain's vote to leave the EU began to sink in.

Mr. Corbyn has faced accusations that he lost the referendum by failing to rally his party's core working-class voter base, more than a third (37 per cent) of whom who defied their party leadership to back a Brexit in Thursday's historic referendum.

"This is sad news indeed and I cannot understand how Jeremy thinks it will help his worsening position with the PLP," Labour MP Roberta Blackman-Woods tweeted following the sacking of Mr. Benn.

"The Labour Shadow Cabinet must now act to save the Party and for the sake of the country. Otherwise we will never be forgiven," tweeted fellow party lawmaker Ben Bradshaw.

Mr. Corbyn has dismissed the vote of no confidence, but the issue will likely dominate a meeting of the parliamentary Labour party on Monday.

Any challenger would need the support of 20 per cent of the party's 229 MPs and it would then be put to party members, who propelled the veteran socialist to power only last September.

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