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Jeremy Corbyn
Jeremy Corbyn
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Jeremy Bernard Corbyn (/ˈkɔːrbɪn/; born 26 May 1949) is a British politician who has been Member of Parliament (MP) for Islington North since 1983. He currently sits as an independent, and is the interim leader of Your Party, which he cofounded with Zarah Sultana in July 2025. Corbyn had previously been a member of the Labour Party from 1965 until his expulsion in 2024, and served as Leader of the Opposition and Leader of the Labour Party from 2015 to 2020 and was a member of the Socialist Campaign Group parliamentary caucus. He identifies ideologically as a socialist on the political left.[1][2]

Born in Chippenham, Wiltshire, Corbyn joined the Labour Party as a teenager. Moving to London, he became a trade union representative. In 1974, he was elected to Haringey Council and became Secretary of Hornsey Constituency Labour Party until elected as the MP for Islington North in 1983. His activism has included Anti-Fascist Action, the Anti-Apartheid Movement, the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, and advocating for a united Ireland and Palestinian statehood. As a backbencher, Corbyn routinely voted against the Labour whip, including New Labour governments. A vocal opponent of the Iraq War, he chaired the Stop the War Coalition from 2011 to 2015, and received the Gandhi International Peace Award and Seán MacBride Peace Prize. Following Ed Miliband's resignation after the party had lost the 2015 general election, Corbyn won the 2015 party leadership election to succeed him. The Labour Party's membership increased sharply, both during the leadership campaign and following his election.[3]

Taking the party to the left, Corbyn advocated renationalising public utilities and railways, a less interventionist military policy, and reversals of austerity cuts to welfare and public services. Although he had historically been critical of the European Union (EU), he supported the Remain campaign in the 2016 EU membership referendum. After Labour MPs sought to remove him in 2016 through a leadership challenge, he won a second leadership contest against Owen Smith. In the 2017 general election, Corbyn led Labour to increase its vote share by 10 percentage points to 40 per cent, their largest rise since the 1945 general election. During his tenure as leader, Corbyn was criticised for antisemitism within the party. He condemned antisemitism[4] and apologised for its presence,[5] while his leadership saw a strengthening of disciplinary procedures regarding hate speech and racism.[6] In 2019, after deadlock in Parliament over Brexit, Corbyn endorsed holding a referendum on the withdrawal agreement, with a personal stance of neutrality. In the 2019 general election, Labour's vote share fell to 32 per cent, leading to a loss of 60 seats, leaving it with 202, its fewest since the 1935 general election. Corbyn remained Labour leader for four months while the leadership election to replace him took place. His resignation as Labour leader formally took effect in April 2020 following the election of Keir Starmer, who led the party to victory at the next general election in 2024 with a vote share of 34 per cent.

After asserting that the scale of antisemitism had been overstated for political reasons, Corbyn was suspended from the party in 2020. In May 2024, after the 2024 general election had been called, Corbyn was not allowed to stand as a Labour candidate for his constituency, and subsequently announced he would stand as an independent candidate for Islington North; he was then expelled from Labour.[7] He won re-election with a majority of 7,247.[8] In July 2025, Corbyn and fellow independent MP Zarah Sultana announced the formation of a new political party.

Early life

[edit]
Adams Grammar School, where Corbyn attended secondary school

Jeremy Bernard Corbyn was born on 26 May 1949 in Chippenham, Wiltshire,[9][10] the son of mathematics teacher Naomi Loveday (née Josling; 1915–1987)[11] and electrical engineer and power rectifier expert David Benjamin Corbyn (1915–1986).[12] He has three elder brothers; one of them, Piers Corbyn (born 1947), is a weather forecaster who later became known as a climate change denier and anti-vaccine conspiracy theorist.[13][14][15] For the first seven years of his life, the family lived in Kington St Michael, Wiltshire.[12] His parents were Labour Party members[16] and peace campaigners who met in the 1930s at a committee meeting in support of the Spanish Republic at Conway Hall during the Spanish Civil War.[17][18][19]

When Corbyn was seven, the family moved to Pave Lane, Shropshire, where his father bought Yew Tree Manor, a 17th-century farmhouse[20] which was once part of the Duke of Sutherland's Lilleshall estate.[21][12][22] Corbyn attended Castle House School, an independent preparatory school near Newport, Shropshire, before becoming a day student at Newport's Adams Grammar School at the age of 11.[23][24]

While still at school, Corbyn became active in the League Against Cruel Sports and the Labour Party Young Socialists within The Wrekin.[24] He was also a member of the leftist youth organisation the Woodcraft Folk.[25] He joined the Labour Party at the age of 16.[16] He achieved two A-Levels at grade E, the lowest possible passing grade, before leaving school at 18.[26][27] Corbyn joined the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament in 1966 while at school[27] and later became one of its three vice-chairs and subsequently vice-president.[28] Around this time, he also campaigned against the Vietnam War.[29]

After school, Corbyn worked briefly as a reporter for the local Newport and Market Drayton Advertiser newspaper.[30][31] Around the age of 19, he spent two years doing Voluntary Service Overseas in Jamaica as a youth worker and geography teacher.[27][32][33] He subsequently visited Argentina, Brazil, Chile, and Uruguay throughout 1969 and 1970. While in Brazil, he participated in a student demonstration in São Paulo against the Brazilian military government. He also attended a May Day march in Santiago, where the atmosphere around Salvador Allende's Popular Unity alliance which swept to power in the Chilean elections of 1970 made an impression on him: "[I] noticed something very different from anything I had experienced... what Popular Unity and Allende had done was weld together the folk tradition, the song tradition, the artistic tradition and the intellectual tradition".[34][35]

Early career and political activities

[edit]

Returning to the UK in 1971, Corbyn worked as an official for the National Union of Tailors and Garment Workers.[27] He began a course in trade union studies at North London Polytechnic but left after a year without a degree.[36] He worked as a trade union organiser for the National Union of Public Employees (NUPE) and Amalgamated Engineering and Electrical Union,[23][37] where his union was approached by Tony Benn and "encouraged ... to produce a blueprint for workers' control of British Leyland"; the plans did not proceed after Benn was moved to a different Department.[38]

Corbyn was appointed a member of a district health authority and in early 1974, at the age of 24, he was elected to Haringey Council from South Hornsey ward.[39] After boundary changes in 1978 he was re-elected in Harringay ward as councillor, remaining so until 1983.[17][40] As a delegate from Hornsey to the Labour Party Conference in 1978, Corbyn successfully moved a motion calling for dentists to be employed by the National Health Service (NHS) rather than as private contractors.[41] He also spoke in another debate, describing a motion calling for greater support for law and order as "more appropriate to the National Front than to the Labour Party".[42]

Corbyn became the local Labour Party's agent and organiser,[43] and had responsibility for the 1979 general election campaign in Hornsey.[23]

Around this time, he became involved with the London Labour Briefing, where he was a contributor. Described by The Times in 1981 as "Briefing's founder",[44] The Economist in a 1982 article named Corbyn as "Briefing's general secretary figure",[45] as did a profile on Corbyn compiled by parliamentary biographer Andrew Roth in 2004,[46][47] which states that he joined the editorial board as General Secretary in 1979.[23] Michael Crick, in the 2016 edition of his book Militant, says that Corbyn was "a member of the editorial board",[48] as does Lansley, Goss and Wolmar's 1989 work The Rise and Fall of the Municipal Left.[49] Corbyn said in 2017 that these reports were inaccurate, telling Sophy Ridge: "I read the magazine. I wrote for the magazine. I was not a member of the editorial board. I didn't agree with it."[46][47]

He worked on Tony Benn's unsuccessful deputy leadership campaign in 1981. Corbyn was keen to allow former International Marxist Group member Tariq Ali to join the party, despite Labour's National Executive having declared him unacceptable, and declared that "so far as we are concerned ... he's a member of the party and he'll be issued with a card."[50] In May 1982, when Corbyn was chairman of the Constituency Labour Party, Ali was given a party card signed by Corbyn;[51] in November, the local party voted by 17 to 14 to insist on Ali's membership "up to and including the point of disbandment of the party".[52]

In the July 1982 edition of Briefing, Corbyn opposed expulsions of the Trotskyist and entryist group Militant, saying that "If expulsions are in order for Militant, they should apply to us too." In the same year, he was the "provisional convener" of "Defeat the Witch-Hunt Campaign", based at Corbyn's then address.[53] The Metropolitan Police's Special Branch monitored Corbyn for two decades, until the early 2000s, as he was "deemed to be a subversive". According to the Labour Party, "The Security Services kept files on many peace and Labour movement campaigners at the time, including anti-Apartheid activists and trade unionists".[54]

Labour parliamentary backbencher (1983–2015)

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Labour in opposition (1982–1997)

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Corbyn was selected as the Labour Party candidate for the constituency of Islington North, in February 1982,[27][55] winning the final ballot for selection by 39 votes against 35 for GLC councillor Paul Boateng, who in 1987 became one of the first three Black British Members of Parliament (MP).[23] At the 1983 general election he was elected MP for the constituency,[27] defeating the Independent Labour incumbent Michael O'Halloran, and immediately joined the socialist Campaign Group, later becoming secretary of the group.[56][57]

Shortly after being elected to Parliament, he began writing a weekly column for the left-wing Morning Star newspaper.[58] In May 2015, he said that "the Star is the most precious and only voice we have in the daily media".[59] In February 2017, the Morning Star said of Corbyn: "He has been bullied, betrayed and ridiculed, and yet he carries on with the same grace and care he always shows to others – however objectionable their behaviour and treatment of him might be."[60]

In 1983, Corbyn spoke on a "no socialism without gay liberation" platform and continued to campaign for LGBT rights.[61]

He was a campaigner against apartheid in South Africa, serving on the National Executive of the Anti-Apartheid Movement,[62] and was arrested in 1984 while demonstrating outside South Africa House, leading, decades later, to a viral image of Corbyn being arrested circulated by supporters on social media.[63][64] This was as a member of the City of London Anti-Apartheid Group (CLAAG) who carried out a "non-stop picket" for 1,408 days to campaign for Nelson Mandela's release from prison. The Anti-Apartheid Movement did not support this protest, as they had agreed not to demonstrate within 30 feet of the embassy, and the picket failed to gain support from the London ANC; Mandela's failure to respond to CLAAG following his release from prison in 1990 is frequently described as a 'snub'.[65][66]

He supported the 1984–85 miners' strike.[67] In 1985, he invited striking miners into the gallery of the House of Commons; they were expelled for shouting: "Coal not dole".[61] At the end of the strike Corbyn was given a medallion by the miners in recognition of his help.[67]

In 1985, he was appointed national secretary of the newly launched Anti-Fascist Action.[68]

During the BBC's Newsnight in 1984, Conservative MP Terry Dicks said that so-called Labour "scruffs" (such as Corbyn, who at this time was known for wearing an old polo-necked sweater to the Commons[69]) should be banned from addressing the House of Commons unless they maintained higher standards. Corbyn responded, saying that: "It's not a fashion parade, it's not a gentleman's club, it's not a bankers' institute, it's a place where the people are represented."[70]

In 1990, Corbyn opposed the poll tax (formally known as the Community Charge)[71] and nearly went to jail for not paying the tax.[63] He appeared in court the following year as a result.[72]

Corbyn supported the campaign to overturn the convictions of Jawad Botmeh and Samar Alami for the 1994 bombing of the Israeli Embassy in London which argued that there was insufficient evidence to tie them to the act, along with Amnesty International, Unison and a number of journalists and other MPs. Botmeh and Alami had admitted possessing explosives and guns but denied they were for use in Britain. The convictions were upheld by the High Court of Justice in 2001 and by the European Court of Human Rights in 2007.[73]

Corbyn sat on the Social Security Select Committee from 1992 to 1997.[74]

Irish politics

[edit]

A longstanding supporter of a united Ireland, in the 1980s Corbyn met Sinn Féin leader Gerry Adams a number of times.[47] Corbyn consistently stated that he maintained links with Sinn Fein in order to work for a resolution to the armed conflict.[47] According to The Sunday Times, Corbyn was involved in over 72 events connected with Sinn Féin or other pro-republican groups during the period of the IRA's paramilitary campaign.[75]

Corbyn met Adams at the 1983 and 1989 Labour conferences (facilitated by pro-IRA Red Action)[76] and in 1983 at Westminster, along with a number of other Labour MPs.[77] In 1984, Corbyn and Ken Livingstone invited Adams, two convicted IRA volunteers and other members of Sinn Féin to Westminster.[47] He was criticised by the Labour Party leadership for the meeting, which took place two weeks after the IRA's bombing of the Conservative Party leadership that killed five people.[78][61]

During the 1980s he campaigned on behalf of the Guildford Four and Birmingham Six, who were wrongly convicted of responsibility for IRA bombings in England in the mid-1970s.[79][80][81][82][83] In 1986, Corbyn was arrested with 15 demonstrators protesting against what they saw as weak evidence and poor treatment during the trial of a group of IRA members including Patrick Magee, who was convicted of the Brighton hotel bombing and other attacks. After refusing police requests to move from outside the court, Corbyn and the other protesters were arrested for obstruction and held for five hours before being released on bail, but were not charged.[84]

In 1987, Corbyn attended a commemoration by the Wolfe Tone Society in London for eight IRA members who were killed by Special Air Service soldiers while attacking a Royal Ulster Constabulary police station in Loughgall, County Armagh. At the commemoration, he told his fellow attendees that "I'm happy to commemorate all those who died fighting for an independent Ireland" and attacked the British government's policies in Northern Ireland, calling for all British troops to be withdrawn from the region.[85][86] Corbyn subsequently said that he had attended the event, which included a minute of silence for the eight IRA members, to "call for a peace and dialogue process".[87]

He voted against the 1985 Anglo-Irish Agreement, saying "We believe that the agreement strengthens rather than weakens the border between the six and the 26 counties, and those of us who wish to see a United Ireland oppose the agreement for that reason."[47]

In the early 1990s, MI5 opened a file on Corbyn to monitor his links to the IRA.[86][88][89]

In 1994, Corbyn signed a Commons motion condemning the 1974 Birmingham pub bombings, which killed 21 people.[87]

A short time after IRA plans to bomb London were foiled in 1996, Corbyn invited Adams to the House of Commons for a press conference to promote Adams' autobiography, Before the Dawn. Shadow Northern Ireland Secretary Mo Mowlam and Labour leader Tony Blair condemned the invitation, with Mowlam arguing that it was detrimental to the peace process, and Blair threatening disciplinary action.[90] Adams cancelled the event, to save further embarrassment to Corbyn and to avoid negative publicity.[91]

In 1998, he voted for the Good Friday Agreement, saying he looked forward to "peace, hope and reconciliation in Ireland in the future."[47]

In 2017, Corbyn said that he had "never met the IRA", although Shadow Home Secretary Diane Abbott later clarified that although he had met members of the IRA, "he met with them in their capacity as activists in Sinn Fein".[92][93]

Labour in government (1997–2010)

[edit]
Corbyn in the House of Commons in 2006

Between 1997 and 2010, during the New Labour governments, Corbyn was the Labour MP who voted most often against the party whip, including three-line whip votes. In 2005 he was identified as the second most rebellious Labour MP of all time during the New Labour governments, behind Dennis Skinner.[94] He was the most rebellious Labour MP in the 1997–2001 Parliament,[95] the 2001–2005 Parliament[96] and the 2005–2010 Parliament, defying the whip 428 times while Labour was in power.[97] Jacobin described him as "a figure who for decades challenged them [Labour Party elites] from the backbench as one of the most rebellious left-wing members of parliament".[98]

Corbyn has called for Tony Blair to be investigated for alleged war crimes during the Iraq War.[99] In July 2016, the Chilcot Report of the Iraq Inquiry was issued, criticising Blair for joining the United States in the war against Iraq. Subsequently, Corbyn – who had voted against military action against Iraq – gave a speech in Westminster commenting: "I now apologise sincerely on behalf of my party for the disastrous decision to go to war in Iraq in March 2003" which he called an "act of military aggression launched on a false pretext" something that has "long been regarded as illegal by the overwhelming weight of international opinion".[100] Corbyn specifically apologised to "the people of Iraq"; to the families of British soldiers who died in Iraq or returned injured; and to "the millions of British citizens who feel our democracy was traduced and undermined by the way in which the decision to go to war was taken on."[101]

Corbyn sat on the London Regional Select Committee from 2009 to 2010.[74]

Stop the War Coalition and anti-war activism

[edit]
Corbyn speaking at an anti-drone strike rally organised by the Stop the War Coalition in 2013

In October 2001, Corbyn was elected to the steering committee of the Stop the War Coalition, which was formed to oppose the War in Afghanistan which started later that year. In 2002, Corbyn reported unrest : "there is disquiet...about issues of foreign policy" among some members of the Labour party. He cited "the deployment of troops to Afghanistan and the threat of bombing Iraq" as examples.[102] He was vehemently opposed to Britain's involvement in the Iraq War in 2003, and spoke at dozens of anti-war rallies in Britain and overseas. He spoke at the February anti-Iraq War protest which was said to be the largest such protest in British political history.[103] At the same time, he expressed support for the Iraqi insurgency and the Palestinian intifada when he signed the second Cairo Declaration in December 2003, which said "The Iraqis themselves are now engaged in a titanic struggle to rid their country of occupying forces. The Palestinian intifada continues under the most difficult circumstances. The US administration threatens Iran and other countries on a daily basis. Now is the time to draw together the forces of resistance in the Arab world and from around the globe."[104]

In 2004, Corbyn travelled to Israel with anti-war activist Betty Papworth to witness the release of the Israeli peace activist and whistle-blower Mordechai Vanunu from prison.[105]

In 2006, Corbyn was one of 12 Labour MPs to support Plaid Cymru and the Scottish National Party's call for a parliamentary inquiry into the Iraq War.[106] He was elected chair of the coalition in succession to Andrew Murray in September 2011, but resigned once he became Leader of the Labour Party in September 2015.[107]

Parliamentary groups and activism

[edit]

Corbyn is a member of a number of Parliamentary Trade Union Groups: he is sponsored by several trade unions, including UNISON, Unite and the National Union of Rail, Maritime and Transport Workers. He is a supporter of the Unite Against Fascism pressure group. Corbyn was chair of the All-Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) on the Chagos Islands, chair of the APPG on Mexico, Vice-Chair of the APPG on Latin America and vice-chair of the APPG on Human Rights. He has advocated for the rights of the forcibly removed Chagossians to return to the British Indian Ocean Territory.[108]

Corbyn addressing London's People's Assembly Demonstration in June 2014

Corbyn appeared on a call-in show on Press TV, an Iranian government television channel, several times between 2009 and 2012. He was criticised for appearing on the channel in light of Iran executing and imprisoning homosexuals, as well as Corbyn not questioning contributors who called the BBC "Zionist liars" and described Israel as a "disease".[109] Corbyn said in response that he used the programme to address "human rights issues" and that his appearance fee was "not an enormous amount" and was used to help meet constituency office costs.[110][109] Corbyn's final appearance was six months after the network was fined by Ofcom for its part in filming an interview with Maziar Bahari, an Iranian journalist, saying the interview had been held under duress and after torture.[110]

Labour in opposition (2010–2015)

[edit]

In the 2010 Labour Party leadership election, Corbyn supported Diane Abbott in the first round in which she was eliminated; thereafter, he supported Ed Miliband.[111]

Corbyn was one of 16 signatories to an open letter to Ed Miliband in January 2015 calling for Labour to make a commitment to opposing further austerity, to take rail franchises back into public ownership, and to strengthen collective bargaining arrangements.[112][113]

Corbyn sat on the Justice Select Committee from 2010 to 2015.[74] Before becoming party leader Corbyn had been returned as member of Parliament for Islington North seven times, gaining 60.24% of the vote and a majority of 21,194 in the 2015 general election.[74]

Leadership elections

[edit]
Official portrait, 2017

Following the Labour Party's defeat at the general election on 7 May 2015, Ed Miliband resigned as its party leader, triggering a leadership election. Corbyn decided to stand as a candidate, having been disillusioned by the lack of a left-wing voice, and said to his local newspaper, The Islington Tribune, that he would have a "clear anti-austerity platform". He also said he would vote to scrap the Trident nuclear weapons system and would "seek to withdraw from NATO". He suggested that Britain should establish a national investment bank to boost house-building and improve economic growth and lift wages in areas that had less investment in infrastructure. He would also aim to eliminate the current budget deficit over time and restore the 50p top rate of income tax.[114] He added: "This decision is in response to an overwhelming call by Labour Party members who want to see a broader range of candidates and a thorough debate about the future of the party. I am standing to give Labour Party members a voice in this debate".[115] He indicated that, if he were elected, policies that he put forward would need to be approved by party members before being adopted and that he wanted to "implement the democratic will of our party".[116] The other candidates were Shadow Home Secretary Yvette Cooper, Shadow Health Secretary Andy Burnham and Shadow Care Minister Liz Kendall.[117][118] Several who nominated Corbyn later said they had ensured he had enough votes to stand, more to widen the political debate within the party than because of a desire or expectation that he would win.[119][120]

At the Second Reading of the Welfare Reform and Work Bill in July 2015, Corbyn joined 47 Labour MPs to oppose the Bill, describing it as "rotten and indefensible", whilst the other three leadership candidates abstained under direction from interim leader Harriet Harman.[121] In August 2015, he called on Iain Duncan Smith to resign as Secretary of State for Work and Pensions after it was reported that thousands of disabled people had died after being found fit to work by Work Capability Assessments (instituted in 2008) between 2011 and 2014, although this was challenged by the government and by FullFact who said that the figure included those who had died and therefore their claim had ended, rather than being found fit for work.[122][123]

Corbyn rapidly became the frontrunner among the candidates and was perceived to benefit from a large influx of new members. Hundreds of supporters turned out to hear him speak at the hustings across the nation and their enthusiastic reception and support for him was dubbed "Corbynmania" by the press.[124] Membership numbers continued to climb after the start of his leadership.[3][125] In addition, following a rule change under Miliband, members of the public who supported Labour's aims and values could join the party as "registered supporters" for £3 and be entitled to vote in the election.[126] There was speculation that the rule change would lead to Corbyn being elected by registered supporters without majority support from ordinary members.[127] He was elected party leader in a landslide victory on 12 September 2015 with 59.5% of first-preference votes in the first round of voting.[128] He would have won in the first round with 51% of votes, even without "£3 registered supporters", having gained the support of 49.6% of full members and 57.6% of affiliated supporters.[127][129] His 40.5% majority was a larger proportional majority than that attained by Tony Blair in 1994.[130][128] His margin of victory was said to be "the largest mandate ever won by a party leader".[131]

An internal Labour Party report, entitled The work of the Labour Party's Governance and Legal Unit in relation to antisemitism, 2014–2019, was leaked to the media in April 2020. The report stated that during the 2015 and 2016 leadership contests, staff members at Labour party headquarters looked for ways to exclude from voting members who they believed would vote for Corbyn. The staff members referred to this activity as "trot busting", "bashing trots" and "trot spotting".[132]

Corbynmania

[edit]
A rally in Bristol during Corbyn's leadership campaign in 2016. Corbyn returned to College Green in 2019 for an election rally but his reception was then less enthusiastic.[133]

Corbyn was initially viewed as a token candidate for the left wing of the party and not expected to win. However, many new, young party members, who had joined after the membership fee had been reduced to £3, were attracted by what they saw as Corbyn's authentic, informal style and radical policies.[134] Hundreds of supporters turned out to hear him speak at the hustings across the nation and their enthusiastic reception and support for him was dubbed "Corbynmania" by the press.[124]

Jonathan Dean characterised Corbynmania as a political fandom, comparable with the enthusiastic followings of popular media stars and other modern politicians such as Bernie Sanders and Justin Trudeau. Specific features included use of the #jezwecan hashtag, attendance at rallies and the posting of pictures such as selfies on social media. Artistic, merchandising and other activity consolidated and spread this fannish enthusiasm. This included a "Jeremy Corbyn for Prime Minister" (JC4PM) tour by celebrities such as Charlotte Church, Jeremy Hardy and Maxine Peake; a Corbyn superhero comic book; mash-ups and videos. Many of Corbyn's supporters felt he possessed personal qualities such as earnestness and modesty leading them to develop a sense of emotional attachment to him as individual. These were seen as cultish by critics such as Margaret Beckett who said in 2016 that the Labour Party had been turned into the "Jeremy Corbyn Fan Club".[135]

A chant of "Oh, Jeremy Corbyn" was adopted as an anthem or chorus by his supporters. Sung in the style of a football chant to the tune of a riff from "Seven Nation Army" by The White Stripes,[136] it attracted special attention at the Glastonbury Festival 2017, where Corbyn appeared and spoke to the crowds.[137][138][139] Labour's weaker-than-expected performance in the 2018 local elections led to suggestions that Corbynmania had peaked.[139][140]

Leadership of the Labour Party (2015–2020)

[edit]

First term as Leader of the Opposition (2015–2017)

[edit]
Corbyn speaking at the #StopTrident rally at Trafalgar Square on 27 February 2016

After being elected leader, Corbyn became Leader of the Official Opposition and shortly thereafter his appointment to the Privy Council was announced.[141][142] In Corbyn's first Prime Minister's Questions session as leader, he broke with the traditional format by asking the Prime Minister six questions he had received from members of the public, the result of his invitation to Labour Party members to send suggestions, for which he received around 40,000 emails.[143] Corbyn stressed his desire to reduce the "theatrical" nature of the House of Commons, and his début was described in a Guardian editorial as "a good start" and a "long overdue" change to the tone of PMQs.[144] He delivered his first Labour Party Conference address as leader on 29 September 2015.[145] Party membership nearly doubled between the May 2015 election and October 2015, attributed largely to the election as leader of Corbyn.[3]

In September 2015 an unnamed senior serving general in the British Army stated that a mutiny by the Army could occur if a future Corbyn government moved to scrap Trident, pull out of Nato or reduce the size of the armed forces. The general said "the Army just wouldn't stand for it. The general staff would not allow a prime minister to jeopardise the security of this country and I think people would use whatever means possible, fair or foul to prevent that. You can't put a maverick in charge of a country's security".[146]

In July 2016, a study and analysis by academics from the London School of Economics of national newspaper articles about Corbyn in the first months of his leadership of Labour showed that 75% of them either distorted or failed to represent his actual views on subjects.[147][148]

2017 general election

[edit]
Corbyn with members of his Shadow Cabinet in EventCity, Greater Manchester, at the Labour Party 2017 General Election Launch

The Labour campaign in the 2017 general election focused on social issues such as health care, education and ending austerity.[149] Corbyn's election campaign was run under the slogan "For the Many, Not the Few"[150] and featured rallies with a large audience and connected with a grassroots following for the party, including appearing on stage in front of a crowd of 20,000 at the Wirral Live Festival in Prenton Park.[151][152]

Although Labour started the campaign as far as 20 points behind, and again finished as the second largest party in parliament, it increased its share of the popular vote to 40%, resulting in a net gain of 30 seats and a hung parliament. This was its greatest vote share since 2001. It was the first time Labour had made a net gain of seats since 1997, and the party's 9.6% increase in vote share was its largest in a single general election since 1945.[153][154] This was partly attributed to the popularity of its 2017 Manifesto that promised to scrap tuition fees, address public sector pay, make housing more affordable, end austerity, nationalise the railways and provide school students with free lunches.[155][156][157]

2019 general election and resignation

[edit]
Corbyn launching the Labour Party's 2019 general election campaign

In May 2019, Theresa May announced her resignation and stood down as prime minister in July, following the election of her replacement, former Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson.[158] Corbyn said that Labour was ready to fight an election against Johnson.[159]

Corbyn campaigning in the 2019 general election at Nottingham Castle

The 2019 Labour Party Manifesto included policies to increase funding for health, negotiate a Brexit deal and hold a referendum giving a choice between the deal and remain, raise the minimum wage, stop the pension age increase, nationalise key industries, and replace universal credit.[160] Due to the plans to nationalise the "big six" energy firms, the National Grid, the water industry, Royal Mail, the railways and the broadband arm of BT, the 2019 manifesto was widely considered as the most radical in several decades, more closely resembling Labour's politics of the 1970s than subsequent decades.[161]

During the campaign for the upcoming general elections, Corbyn was accused by the Hindu Council UK of promoting anti-Hindu sentiments[162] following his disparaging comments on the caste system[163] and his condemnation of the Hindu-right wing Bharatiya Janata Party led Indian government's revocation of the special status of Jammu and Kashmir.[164] Many Hindus living in the UK saw Corbyn's attitude towards Hindus to be heavily influenced by Pakistani Muslim leaders of his party,[165] with whom he shared a common pro-Palestinian stance.

The 2019 general election was the worst defeat in seats for Labour since 1935, with Labour winning just 202 out of 650 seats, their fourth successive election defeat.[166][167] At 32.2%, Labour's share of the vote was down around eight points on the 2017 general election and is lower than that achieved by Neil Kinnock in 1992, although it was higher than in 2010 and 2015. In the aftermath, opinions differed to why the Labour Party was defeated to the extent it was. The Shadow Chancellor John McDonnell largely blamed Brexit and the media representation of the party.[168] Tony Blair argued that the party's unclear position on Brexit and the economic policy pursued by the Corbyn leadership were to blame.[169][170]

Following the Labour Party's unsuccessful performance in the 2019 general election, Corbyn conceded defeat and stated that he intended to step down as leader following the election of a successor and that he would not lead the party into the next election.[171][172] Corbyn himself was re-elected for Islington North with 64.3% of the vote share and a majority of 26,188 votes over the runner-up candidate representing the Liberal Democrats, with Labour's share of the vote falling by 8.7%.[173] The Guardian described the results as a "realignment" of UK politics as the Conservative landslide took many traditionally Labour seats in England and Wales.[174] Corbyn insisted that he had "pride in the manifesto" that Labour put forward and blamed the defeat on Brexit.[175] According to polling by the Conservative peer Lord Ashcroft, Corbyn was himself a major contribution to the party's defeat.[176] Corbyn remained Labour leader for four months while the leadership election to replace him took place. His resignation as Labour leader formally took effect in April 2020 following the election of Keir Starmer.

Independent MP (2020–2025)

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EHRC report and suspension

[edit]

On 29 October 2020, a report by the Equalities and Human Rights Commission into antisemitism in the Labour Party was published, finding that the party was responsible for unlawful acts of harassment and discrimination.[177][178] In response to the report, Corbyn said that while antisemitism was "absolutely abhorrent" and that "one anti-Semite [in the Labour Party] is one too many", he said that "the scale of the problem was also dramatically overstated for political reasons by our opponents inside and outside the party, as well as by much of the media".[179] He further said that "the public perception in an opinion poll last year was that one third of all Labour party members were somehow or other under suspicion of antisemitism. The reality is, it was 0.3 per cent of party members had a case against them which had to be put through the process."[180] A fact check by Channel 4 News noted that Corbyn's "0.3 per cent" claim was likely based on an estimate provided by Labour General Secretary Jennie Formby during her investigation and first published in a 2019 study co-authored by media scholar Greg Philo.[180][181] Corbyn's claim that "one-third" of party members were believed to be involved in antisemitism complaints by the public likely originated in a Survation poll of 1,009 people conducted in 2019, in which the average perception of respondents familiar with the issue was that 34% of party members were involved in antisemitism complaints; this number is over 300 times the estimate of antisemitism cases arrived at by Formby's actual investigation.[182][183]

Corbyn sits on the backbenches in his first Prime Minister's Questions since his resignation as Labour leader, 22 April 2020

In his press conference around half an hour after Corbyn's statement, Starmer said that anyone who thought the problems were "exaggerated" or were a "factional attack" were "part of the problem and... should be nowhere near the Labour Party". Corbyn defended his comments in a TV interview later that day; shortly after it aired, the Labour Party announced that it had suspended Corbyn pending an investigation.[184] Corbyn's suspension was welcomed by Labour figures including Margaret Hodge,[185] and Harriet Harman,[186] as well as by the Board of Deputies of British Jews.[187] Corbyn stated he would "strongly contest" his suspension.[188] John McDonnell, Unite leader Len McCluskey, and Momentum expressed opposition to Corbyn's suspension.[188]

Peace and Justice Project

[edit]

On 13 December 2020, Corbyn announced the Project for Peace and Justice. Corbyn launched the project on 17 January 2021, and its affiliates include Christine Blower, Len McCluskey and Zarah Sultana. Rafael Correa said that he "welcome[d] the creation" of the project.[189][190][191][192]

Stop the War Coalition statement on Ukraine crisis

[edit]
Corbyn addresses the March Against Racism in Parliament Square, March 2022

On 18 February 2022, in the week before the Russian invasion of Ukraine, Corbyn alongside 11 Labour MPs cosigned a statement from the Stop the War Coalition opposing any war in Ukraine.[193] The statement said that "the crisis should be settled on a basis which recognises the right of the Ukrainian people to self-determination and addresses Russia's security concerns", that NATO "should call a halt to its eastward expansion", and that the British government's sending of arms to Ukraine and troops to eastern Europe served "no purpose other than inflaming tensions and indicating disdain for Russian concerns".[194] The statement's authors also said that they "refute the idea that NATO is a defensive alliance".[194]

On the evening of 24 February, the first day of the invasion, Labour chief whip Alan Campbell wrote to all 11 Labour MPs who had signed the statement, requesting that they withdraw their signatures.[193][195] All 11 agreed to do so the same evening.[193][195] Corbyn and fellow former Labour independent MP Claudia Webbe did not withdraw their signatures from the statement, though David Lammy urged Corbyn to do so.[196]

Expulsion from the Labour Party and 2024 general election

[edit]

Media speculation that Corbyn would contest the 2024 general election as an Independent was reported in October 2023.[197][198] Despite "unanimous support" from his Constituency Labour Party (CLP),[199] Corbyn was not permitted to stand as a Labour parliamentary candidate. After announcing on 24 May 2024 that he would stand as an independent parliamentary candidate for Islington North, he was fully expelled from the Labour Party.[200][201] He was endorsed by Mick Lynch of the National Union of Rail, Maritime and Transport Workers.[202]

Corbyn responded to Keir Starmer's claim of knowing the party would lose the 2019 election by saying "Well, he never said that to me, at any time. And so I just think rewriting history is no help. It shows double standards, shall we say, that he now says he always thought that but he never said it at the time or anything about it. He was part of the campaign. He and I spoke together at events and I find it actually quite sad."[203]

Leading members of the Islington North CLP resigned in order to support Corbyn, while also criticising the manner in which Nargund was selected as Islington North's candidate.[204] Corbyn was comfortably re-elected as an independent, even as Labour won a landslide victory in the general election. His majority over Nargund was over 7,000.[205]

Founding a new political party (2025)

[edit]

In September 2024, Corbyn formed a parliamentary group, the Independent Alliance, with four independent Muslim MPs who were elected on pro-Gaza platforms. In December 2024, The Spectator said that the Independent Alliance was likely to form a political party in 2025.[206] According to The Spectator, three of the members, Shockat Adam, Adnan Hussain and Ayoub Khan, were in favour of the creation of a political party to build momentum, but Corbyn was more hesitant.[206]

Zarah Sultana, who was first elected as a Labour MP in 2019 and re-elected in 2024 but subsequently had had the whip suspended, thereafter sitting as an independent, announced in July 2025 that she was leaving Labour and planned to create a new political party with Corbyn and other independents.[207] On 24 July 2025, initially via a post on X, Corbyn and Sultana launched a website called "Your Party", where people could sign up for information on the founding process and inviting supporters to an inaugural conference. The name of the party has not yet been decided; Sultana said her preference was to call the party "The Left" or "The Left Party".[208] In less than a week, the website's newsletter had received over 500,000 sign-ups.[209]

Policies and views

[edit]
Corbyn at a march for Palestine in Oxford in 2021

Corbyn self-identifies as a socialist.[2][210] He has also been referred to as a "mainstream [Scandinavian] social democrat".[211] He advocates reversing austerity cuts to public services and some welfare funding made since 2010, as well as renationalisation of public utilities and the railways.[212] A longstanding anti-war and anti-nuclear activist, he supports a foreign policy of military non-interventionism and unilateral nuclear disarmament, and has been a prominent activist for Palestinian solidarity throughout the Gaza–Israel conflict.[213] Writer Ronan Bennett, who formerly worked as a research assistant to Corbyn, has described him as "a kind of vegan, pacifist idealist, one with a clear understanding of politics and history, and a commitment to the underdog".[34]

In 1997, the political scientists David Butler and Dennis Kavanagh described Corbyn's political stance as "far-left".[214] Corbyn has described Karl Marx as a "great economist"[215][216] and said he has read some of the works of Adam Smith, Marx and David Ricardo and has "looked at many, many others".[215] However, some have argued that Corbyn is less radical than previously described:[217] for example, the journalist George Eaton has called him "Keynesian".[218] In 2023, The Daily Telegraph reported that most of the tax policies in Corbyn's 2019 general election manifesto had been implemented by the winning Conservative government, including a higher corporation tax, a windfall tax on oil companies, a reduction in annual tax allowances on dividend income, raising income tax on high earners, and introducing a digital services tax on online retailers.[219]

Corbyn named John Smith as the former Labour leader whom he most admired, describing him as "a decent, nice, inclusive leader". He also said he was "very close and very good friends" with Michael Foot.[114]

Allegations of antisemitism

[edit]

Allegations of antisemitism within the party grew during Corbyn's leadership. Incidents involving Naz Shah in 2014 and Ken Livingstone in 2016 resulted in their suspension from party membership pending investigation. In response, Corbyn established the Chakrabarti Inquiry, which concluded that while the party was not "overrun by anti-Semitism or other forms of racism," there was an "occasionally toxic atmosphere" and "clear evidence of ignorant attitudes."[220][221]

In 2017, Labour Party rules were amended to categorize hate speech, including antisemitism, as a disciplinary matter. In 2018, Corbyn faced scrutiny for his response in 2012 to the allegedly antisemitic mural Freedom for Humanity and for his association with Facebook groups, mainly pro-Palestinian, containing antisemitic posts. Labour's National Executive Committee (NEC) adopted a definition of antisemitism, for disciplinary purposes, in July of that year, aligning with the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) Working Definition, with modified examples related to criticism of Israel.[222][223]

In September 2018, the NEC incorporated all 11 IHRA examples, unamended, into the party's code of conduct.[224]

In May 2019, the Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) launched an inquiry into whether Labour had "unlawfully discriminated against, harassed or victimised people because they are Jewish." In October 2020, the EHRC published its report, determining that the party was "responsible for unlawful acts of harassment and discrimination." The EHRC found 23 instances of political interference and concluded that Labour breached the Equality Act in two cases.[225][226] Corbyn was subsequently suspended from the Labour Party and had the party whip removed on 29 October 2020 "for a failure to retract" his assertion that the scale of antisemitism within Labour had been overstated by opponents.[227]

Media coverage

[edit]

Analyses of domestic media coverage of Corbyn have found it to be critical or antagonistic.[228][229] In July 2016, academics from the London School of Economics published a study of 812 articles about Corbyn taken from eight national newspapers around the time of his Labour leadership election. The study found that 75 per cent of the articles either distorted or failed to represent his actual views on subjects. The study's director commented that "Our analysis shows that Corbyn was thoroughly delegitimised as a political actor from the moment he became a prominent candidate and even more so after he was elected as party leader".[147][148]

Another report by the Media Reform Coalition and Birkbeck College in July 2016, based on 10 days of coverage around the time of multiple shadow cabinet resignations, found "marked and persistent imbalance" in favour of sources critical to him; the International Business Times was the only outlet that gave him more favourable than critical coverage.[230]

In August 2016, a YouGov survey found that 97% of Corbyn supporters agreed that the "mainstream media as a whole has been deliberately biasing coverage to portray Jeremy Corbyn in a negative manner", as did 51% of the general "Labour selectorate" sample.[231][232]

In May 2017, Loughborough University's Centre for Research in Communication and Culture concluded that the media was attacking Corbyn far more than May during nine election campaign weekdays examined.[233] The Daily Mail and Daily Express praised Theresa May for election pledges that were condemned when proposed by Labour in previous elections.[234]

In February 2018, Momentum reported that attacks on Corbyn in the press were associated with increases in their membership applications.[235] In September 2019, Labour leaders argued that traditional mainstream media outlets showed bias.[236]

In December 2019, a study by Loughborough University found that British press coverage was twice as hostile to Labour and half as critical of the Conservatives during the 2019 general election campaign as it had been during the 2017 campaign.[237]

In an interview with Middle East Eye in June 2020, Corbyn described the media's treatment of himself while he was Labour leader as obsessive and "at one level laughable, but all designed to be undermining".[238] He said that the media coverage had diverted his media team from helping him pursue "a political agenda on homelessness, on poverty in Britain, on housing, on international issues" to "rebutting these crazy stories, abusive stories, about me the whole time".[238] He said he considered suing as a result of media treatment but was guided by advice from Tony Benn, who told him, "Libel is a rich man's game, and you're not a rich man [...] Go to a libel case – even if you win the case, you'll be destroyed financially in doing so".[238]

Personal life

[edit]
Corbyn in 2007

Corbyn lives in the Finsbury Park area of London.[239][240] He has been married three times and divorced twice, and has three sons with his second wife.[241] In 1974, he married his first wife, Jane Chapman, a fellow Labour Councillor for Haringey and now a professor at the University of Lincoln.[27] They divorced in 1979.[242] In the late 1970s, Corbyn had a brief relationship with Labour MP Diane Abbott.[243][244]

In 1987, Corbyn married Chilean exile Claudia Bracchitta, granddaughter of Ricardo Bracchitta (Consul-General of Spain in Santiago), with whom he has three sons. He missed his youngest son's birth as he was lecturing National Union of Public Employees members at the same hospital.[61] Following a difference of opinion about sending their son to a grammar school (Corbyn opposes selective education), they divorced in 1999 after two years of separation, although Corbyn said in June 2015 that he continues to "get on very well" with her.[72][37][245] His son subsequently attended Queen Elizabeth's School, which had been his wife's first choice.[246] Their second son, Sebastian, worked on his leadership campaign and was later employed as John McDonnell's Chief of Staff.[247][248][249]

Corbyn's second-eldest brother, Andrew, who was a geologist, died of a brain haemorrhage while in Papua New Guinea in 2001. Corbyn escorted the body from Papua New Guinea to Australia, where his brother's widow and children lived.[250]

In 2012, Corbyn went to Mexico to marry his Mexican partner Laura Álvarez,[251] who runs a fair trade coffee import business that has been the subject of some controversy.[252][253] A former human rights lawyer in Mexico, she first met Corbyn shortly after his divorce from Bracchitta, having come to London to support her sister Marcela following the abduction of her niece to America by her sister's estranged husband. They contacted fellow Labour MP Tony Benn for assistance, who introduced them to Corbyn, who met with the police on their behalf and spoke at fundraisers until the girl was located in 2003.[254] Álvarez then returned to Mexico, with the couple maintaining a long-distance relationship until she moved to London in 2011.[255][256] Álvarez has described Corbyn as "not very good at house work but he is a good politician".[257] They had a cat called El Gato ("The Cat" in Spanish).[258][259] Corbyn had previously owned a dog called Mango, described by The Observer in 1984 as his "only constant companion" at the time.[16]

Personal beliefs and interests

[edit]

When interviewed by The Huffington Post in December 2015, Corbyn refused to reveal his religious beliefs and called them a "private thing", but denied that he was an atheist.[260] He has said that he is "sceptical" of having a god in his life.[258] He compared his concerns about the environment to a sort of "spiritualism".[260] Corbyn has described himself as frugal, telling Simon Hattenstone of The Guardian: "I don't spend a lot of money, I lead a very normal life, I ride a bicycle and I don't have a car."[37] He has been a vegetarian for over 50 years, after having volunteered on a pig farm in Jamaica when he was 19, and stated in April 2018 that he was considering becoming a vegan.[261] Although he has been described in the media as teetotal, he said in an interview with the Daily Mirror that he does drink alcohol but "very, very little".[27][262][263]

Corbyn is a member of the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Cycling.[264][265] He enjoys reading and writing,[263] and speaks fluent Spanish.[27] He supports Arsenal F.C., which is based in his constituency, and has signed parliamentary motions praising the successes of its men's and women's teams.[266] In 2015 Corbyn supported a campaign for the club to pay its staff the London Living Wage.[267][268] Corbyn is an avid "drain spotter" and has photographed decorative drain and manhole covers throughout the country.[269]

Corbyn co-edited with Len McCluskey the anthology Poetry for the Many, published in November 2023 by OR Books.[270]

Interview under police caution

[edit]

On 19 January 2025, Corbyn, alongside former Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer John McDonnell, agreed to be interviewed under caution by police following a pro-Palestinian rally in central London. The Metropolitan Police said they witnessed a "deliberate effort, including by protest organisers" to breach conditions that had been imposed on the event. However, it is unclear as to the specific reasons as to why Corbyn was invited to an interview.[271]

Awards and recognition

[edit]

In 2013, Corbyn was awarded the Gandhi International Peace Award for his "consistent efforts over a 30-year parliamentary career to uphold the Gandhian values of social justice and non‐violence".[272][273] In the same year, he was honoured by the Grassroot Diplomat Initiative for his "ongoing support for a number of non-government organisations and civil causes".[274] Corbyn has won the Parliamentary "Beard of the Year Award" a record six times, as well as being named as the Beard Liberation Front's Beard of the Year, having previously described his beard as "a form of dissent" against New Labour.[275][276]

In 2016, Corbyn was the subject of a musical entitled Corbyn the Musical: The Motorcycle Diaries, written by journalists Rupert Myers and Bobby Friedman.[277]

In 2017 the American magazine Foreign Policy named Corbyn in its Top 100 Global Thinkers list for that year "for inspiring a new generation to re-engage in politics".[278] In December 2017 he was one of three recipients awarded the Seán MacBride Peace Prize "for his sustained and powerful political work for disarmament and peace".[279] The award was announced the previous September.[280]

See also

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References

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References

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Further reading

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Jeremy Bernard Corbyn (born 26 May 1949) is a British politician who has served as (MP) for Islington North since 1983, sitting as an independent since 2020. He led the Labour Party and served as from September 2015 until April 2020, following his unexpected election amid a surge in party membership supportive of his left-wing platform. Corbyn's leadership emphasized policies such as nationalization of key industries, increased public spending, and opposition to military actions, which galvanized younger voters but contributed to Labour's worst electoral defeat since 1935 in the . His tenure was overshadowed by persistent allegations of within the party, culminating in a 2020 report that found unlawful acts of harassment and discrimination; Corbyn's initial dismissal of the report's scale led to his suspension from the Labour whip, though he was later reinstated to party membership while remaining barred from Labour candidacy and continuing as an independent MP. In 2024, he won re-election in Islington North as an independent, defeating the official Labour candidate.

Early Life and Education

Family Background and Childhood

Jeremy Bernard Corbyn was born on 26 May 1949 at Chippenham Cottage Hospital in , , . He was the youngest of four sons born to David Benjamin Corbyn (1915–1986), an electrical engineer of Welsh descent, and Naomi Loveday Corbyn (née Josling; 1915–1987), a and who had studied at the in . Both parents were active in left-wing causes, with David Corbyn having briefly aligned with communist sympathies during his youth and Naomi participating in anti-fascist efforts, including support for the Republican side in the . The Corbyn family initially resided in the rural village of Kington St Michael near , where Jeremy spent his earliest years in a modest setting reflective of middle-class circumstances. Around age seven, the family relocated to a larger seven-bedroom property in the Purbeck area of Dorset, which David Corbyn had acquired through his engineering work and investments, affording the children greater space amid the scenic countryside. His siblings—brothers , Piers (a and activist), and one other—shared in family activities such as playing bicycle polo on the lawn, fostering a childhood marked by outdoor pursuits and early exposure to political discussions at home. Corbyn's upbringing emphasized self-reliance and , influenced by his parents' experiences in —David had served in the Royal Navy's anti-aircraft service, while Naomi worked in wartime education—yet both opposed , shaping the household's leanings without overt ideological . Claims of distant Jewish ancestry through his mother's side have been genealogically refuted, with no verifiable ethnic or religious ties beyond the family's secular, progressive ethos. The family's relative affluence, including ownership of a substantial home unsuitable for naming due to its scale, contrasted with the egalitarian values instilled, providing Corbyn an insulated rural childhood until his teenage years.

Schooling and Early Influences

Corbyn briefly attended , a fee-paying independent preparatory school near Newport in , until the age of 11. He then transferred to Adams' in Newport, a state-funded selective established in 1656, where he completed his . At Adams' Grammar School, Corbyn developed an early interest in , focusing on themes of peace, justice, and opposition to nuclear weapons. He joined the school's branch of the (CND), reflecting his emerging anti-militarism. This period marked the beginning of his lifelong commitment to pacifist and socialist causes, influenced by the broader context and domestic debates over Britain's nuclear deterrent. His family's background provided foundational influences, as his parents—David, an electrical engineer, and Naomi, a teacher—held left-leaning views shaped by their support for the Republican side in the against Franco's fascists. As the youngest of four brothers, including , Corbyn grew up in a politically engaged household in rural after the family relocated there in , fostering an environment conducive to questioning authority and inequality. These elements, combined with school experiences, steered him toward activism rather than traditional career paths upon leaving education around 1967.

Early Political Involvement

Activism and Trade Unions

Upon returning to in 1971 after teaching in , Corbyn immersed himself in activities, initially representing workers through the now-defunct National Union of Tailors and Garment Makers, where he advocated for garment workers denied back pay by exploitative employers. He then transitioned to the Amalgamated Union of Engineering Workers (AUEW), supporting industrial actions amid the economic turbulence of the early 1970s, including strikes that contributed to the widespread labor unrest later termed the in 1978–1979. From 1975 to 1983, Corbyn served as an organiser for the National Union of Public Employees (NUPE), later merged into , managing a membership of around 40,000 workers across boroughs such as Haringey and . In this capacity, he negotiated on workplace issues, including pay disputes and conditions for low-wage public employees, while aligning union efforts with broader left-wing causes like opposition to the 1971 Immigration Act, which he criticized for discriminating against citizens. His union work overlapped with party roles, as he became secretary of the Hornsey in the mid-1970s, using it to mobilize against perceived Thatcherite precursors in Labour's moderate wing. Corbyn's activism extended beyond union organizing to international solidarity campaigns, notably the , where he participated in protests against 's regime, including a 1984 demonstration outside South Africa House that led to his on 14 for defying police orders to remove an anti-apartheid banner. He also supported Chilean exiles following the 1973 Pinochet coup and engaged with the (CND), reflecting his consistent opposition to and , though these stances drew criticism for aligning with groups sympathetic to Soviet-influenced causes during the . Through such efforts, Corbyn built networks that emphasized worker internationalism, often prioritizing ideological solidarity over pragmatic electoral considerations.

Local Politics in Islington

Corbyn became involved in Islington's political scene in the late 1970s through his work as an organiser for the National Union of Public Employees (NUPE), representing workers in , including campaigns on and labour rights in the . By the early 1980s, he was active in the local Labour Party amid a surge of left-wing in , which opposed emerging Thatcherite policies and emphasized against local inequalities. In 1982, following the resignation of the incumbent MP Michael O'Halloran, Corbyn was selected as the Labour candidate for North, leveraging his grassroots connections and commitment to local issues such as tenants' protections and opposition to council rate hikes. He won the seat in the 1983 with a majority of 888 votes, defeating the Conservative candidate McGuinness-Bryan, and began focusing on borough-specific concerns like safety and accessibility. As the newly elected MP, Corbyn campaigned for a ban on heavy goods vehicles in after a fatal lorry accident on St Paul's Road in 1983, highlighting risks from increased traffic following the M25 motorway's completion. In 1986, he led opposition to one-person bus operations on routes 43, 149, and 279 serving , arguing that the change reduced safety and convenience for elderly and disabled residents reliant on assistance. Corbyn's local engagement extended to fiscal resistance; in 1991, he withheld payment of a £481 bill, joining 16 other protesters in court to challenge the levy on behalf of low-income constituents burdened by the community charge's introduction. He also advocated for in policing, campaigning in 1996 for a third into the 1992 death of Leon Patterson in an police cell, underscoring concerns over custodial treatment in the borough. These efforts reflected a pattern of prioritizing constituent welfare over national , establishing his reputation as a community-focused representative in Islington North.

Parliamentary Backbencher (1983–2015)

Initial Terms and Rebellions Against Party Line

Corbyn was elected as the Labour for North on 9 June 1983, defeating the sitting Conservative MP Michael Fidler by a margin of 503 votes in a year of significant Labour gains nationwide. From the outset of his parliamentary career, he aligned with the , a faction of left-wing Labour MPs formed in 1982 to oppose the perceived rightward drift of the party leadership under and subsequently , and participated in its frequent challenges to the party whip on matters of policy and internal democracy. The group, of which Corbyn became a longstanding member, was involved in three-quarters of all Labour parliamentary rebellions between 1983 and 2010, reflecting his commitment to maintaining the party's radical socialist orientation amid Kinnock's efforts to modernize and broaden its appeal. During Kinnock's leadership from 1983 to 1992, Corbyn consistently rebelled against positions that moderated Labour's stances on defence and , including opposition to the leader's gradual abandonment of unilateral in favor of multilateral negotiations, which Kinnock championed to distance the party from its 1983 manifesto commitments. He advocated for stronger anti-militarism, criticizing alignments and British involvement in Cold War-era deployments, often voting or speaking against the party line in debates on arms spending and international alliances. In 1988, Corbyn nominated as a candidate for Labour leader, directly challenging Kinnock's authority and highlighting divisions over economic and party selection reforms. These early rebellions established Corbyn's pattern of prioritizing ideological consistency over party unity, contributing to his marginalization from frontbench opportunities. Under John Smith's brief leadership from 1992 to 1994, and continuing into Tony Blair's era through , Corbyn's dissent persisted on issues like , where he opposed further centralization of powers, and domestic policies favoring market-oriented reforms over public ownership. By the end of his initial terms, spanning the parliaments, Corbyn had begun accumulating a record of defiance that would total 533 votes against the Labour leadership over his backbench tenure from to 2015, with early patterns centered on resisting the party's centrist pivot. His approach emphasized activism and extra-parliamentary campaigns, such as support for disputes and anti-apartheid efforts, often at odds with the leadership's electoral strategy.

Campaigns on Domestic Issues

Corbyn, representing Islington North since his election on 9 June 1983, prioritized local housing and homelessness issues throughout his backbench tenure. As a former chair of Islington Council's housing committee in the late 1970s and early 1980s, he continued advocating for council tenants' rights against redevelopment schemes perceived to prioritize profit over social needs, such as opposing luxury developments that reduced affordable units in the borough. In the 1990s and 2000s, he campaigned against rising property prices displacing low-income residents, emphasizing the need for increased social housing stock amid London's housing crisis, a stance he maintained consistently over three decades. On national fiscal policy, Corbyn actively opposed the Community Charge, or , introduced by the Thatcher government in 1989. He refused to pay his £481 bill in 1990, joining mass non-payment campaigns that contributed to the policy's repeal in 1991, and appeared at Highbury Magistrates' Court on 14 February 1991 alongside 16 other residents, facing potential imprisonment before the charge's abandonment. This action aligned with broader Labour left resistance to regressive taxation, though it drew criticism for undermining legal compliance. In , Corbyn frequently rebelled against Labour governments on domestic reforms involving marketization of public services. He voted against the (Community Health and Standards) Act 2003, which enabled NHS foundation trusts with greater autonomy and private sector involvement, arguing it fragmented the service and invited inefficiency. Similarly, he opposed the Higher Education Act 2004 introducing variable top-up fees, rebelling to preserve free higher education access, and critiqued public-private partnerships (PFI) schemes initiated under Labour, which he later described as creating long-term debt burdens on taxpayers exceeding £200 billion by the 2010s. By 2005, analyses identified him as one of Labour's most rebellious MPs on economic and social policies, with over 400 divisions against the party during the Blair-Brown era, prioritizing opposition to and precursors over party unity.

Foreign Policy Stances and Irish Republican Sympathies

During his tenure as a from 1983 to 2015, Corbyn consistently opposed British military engagements abroad, advocating for unilateral and criticizing as a destabilizing force. He voted against the renewal of the UK's nuclear deterrent program on multiple occasions, including in 2007 and 2012, arguing it diverted resources from domestic needs and risked escalation. Corbyn expressed long-standing skepticism toward , describing it in the 1990s as perpetuating divisions and later calling for its eventual disbandment to reduce global military tensions. His opposition extended to specific interventions, such as the 1982 , where he condemned the dispatch of the British Task Force, called for its immediate withdrawal, and favored negotiations for joint administration with over defending the islands' . Similarly, he opposed the 1999 -led bombing of , rejecting it despite lacking UN authorization, consistent with his broader anti-interventionist stance that prioritized dialogue over force. Corbyn's foreign policy outlook also included strong support for , routinely challenging Labour leadership on issues like arms sales to and settlement expansion during his early parliamentary years. This aligned with his advocacy for anti-colonial movements, including opposition to apartheid in , though his positions often diverged from party consensus, leading to frequent rebellions against the . A particularly contentious aspect of Corbyn's foreign policy engagements involved his sympathies toward amid . He participated in numerous events aligned with and republican groups, including at least 72 documented actions between the and , such as commemorations honoring IRA members . In October 1984, shortly after the IRA's bombing of the Grand Hotel in —which targeted the and killed five people—Corbyn invited leaders and to the for discussions, at a time when the party was widely isolated due to its IRA ties. Further instances underscored these sympathies: in 1987, Corbyn observed a minute's silence at a event to honor eight IRA members killed by the SAS during an attempted attack on a in , . He also attended a commemoration in for the same Loughgall incident, defending such participation as efforts to foster dialogue amid ongoing violence. Earlier, in the 1980s, Corbyn joined audiences at Conway Hall in paying tribute to IRA dead, standing in their honor during republican gatherings. These activities drew scrutiny from British security services; maintained a file on Corbyn for over two decades, suspecting his republican contacts undermined democratic processes and peace efforts. Corbyn framed his engagements with —preferring it over the more moderate SDLP—as necessary for bridging divides and advancing peace, predating the . However, critics, including unionist politicians and security analysts, viewed them as tacit endorsement of IRA , given the timing during active bombings and the absence of equivalent to loyalist paramilitaries. In later reflections, such as during the 2017 election, Corbyn described IRA actions as "completely wrong" for targeting civilians but avoided isolating them from broader conflict dynamics, reiterating his focus on reconciliation.

Anti-War Positions Pre-2003 Iraq Invasion

Jeremy Corbyn, as a Labour , consistently opposed British military interventions throughout the 1980s and 1990s, voting against all proposed government military actions during his parliamentary tenure up to 2003. His stance aligned with pacifist and (CND) principles, emphasizing diplomatic solutions over force and criticizing NATO's role in escalating conflicts. During the 1982 Falklands War, Corbyn, then a councillor in Islington North, publicly condemned the dispatch of the British Task Force to the South Atlantic and called for its immediate withdrawal, arguing the conflict stemmed from colonial disputes rather than self-defense. He later described the war as unjust in broader critiques of UK foreign engagements, prioritizing negotiation with Argentina over military reclamation of the islands. In the lead-up to and during the 1991 , Corbyn sponsored 73 on 14 November 1990, opposing US-led force against , and signed Motion 147 on 3 December 1990, advocating sanctions and diplomacy instead of military escalation following 's invasion of . He voted against authorization of British participation, decrying the operation as an extension of Western imperialism despite UN resolutions, and tabled amendments seeking ary opposition to the bombing campaign. Corbyn's opposition extended to NATO's 1999 Kosovo intervention, where he rejected the alliance's bombing campaign against Yugoslav forces without explicit UN Security Council approval, labeling it an unauthorized aggression that risked broader escalation in the Balkans. Unlike the majority of Labour MPs who supported the action to halt ethnic cleansing, he argued it violated international law and prioritized arms embargoes and peacekeeping over airstrikes, consistent with his critique of NATO as a Cold War relic prone to offensive operations. These positions often placed him in rebellion against Labour leadership under both Neil Kinnock and Tony Blair, reflecting a principled isolationism amid party shifts toward Atlanticist alliances.

Rise to Labour Leadership (2015)

Leadership Election and Momentum Surge

Following the Labour Party's defeat in the 7 May 2015 general election, Ed Miliband resigned as leader on 8 May 2015, triggering a leadership contest under a new "one member, one vote" system that included votes from full members, affiliated supporters (primarily trade unionists), and registered supporters paying a £3 fee. Jeremy Corbyn, a veteran backbencher, entered the race on 15 June 2015, securing nominations from 36 MPs—exceeding the required 35—just before the deadline, positioning him as the sole candidate representing the party's left wing against more centrist rivals Andy Burnham, Yvette Cooper, and Liz Kendall. Initially viewed as a fringe contender unlikely to win, Corbyn's campaign emphasized opposition to austerity, renationalization of utilities, nuclear disarmament, and skepticism toward NATO and Western foreign interventions, resonating with voters disillusioned by the Iraq War legacy and economic policies post-2008 financial crisis. Corbyn's support surged amid widespread dissatisfaction with the other candidates' perceived continuity with policies, fueled by grassroots organizing, mobilization, and large public rallies that drew thousands, particularly young people and first-time voters. Labour Party membership ballooned from approximately 195,000 before the election to over 388,000 full members by the voting period, supplemented by around 312,000 registered supporters and affiliate votes, with over 160,000 applications processed in the final 24 hours of registration alone on 12 2015. Polling data indicated Corbyn leading decisively among new members and supporters, who comprised a of the expanded electorate, reflecting a shift toward left-wing priorities on inequality and anti-war stances rather than electability concerns raised by party figures. This influx was driven by organic enthusiasm rather than centralized direction, though trade unions like Unite provided organizational boosts by encouraging members to register as supporters. On 12 September 2015, Corbyn secured victory on the first ballot with 59.5% of votes (251,422 votes), far surpassing Burnham's 19% (111,958), Cooper's 17% (119,401, adjusted), and Kendall's 4.5% (25,643), marking the largest mandate for a Labour leader since the system began in 1983. The result highlighted a profound realignment within Labour, with Corbyn dominating among under-35 voters and new joiners, while traditional members split more evenly. To capitalize on this wave of activism, was established in late October 2015 by Corbyn allies including , initially as a network to sustain supporter engagement through local groups, training, and policy advocacy, quickly growing to tens of thousands of participants focused on internal party democracy and anti-austerity campaigns. 's emergence formalized the election's momentum, amplifying Corbyn's base amid ensuing intraparty tensions but prioritizing member empowerment over top-down control.

Policy Platform and Voter Base

Corbyn's policy platform during the 2015 Labour leadership campaign emphasized opposition to austerity economics, advocating instead for public investment, nationalization of key industries, and expanded social welfare provisions. On 14 August 2015, he unveiled a 10-point plan titled "Standing to Deliver," which promised a "new kind of politics" focused on rebuilding public services and reducing inequality. Key elements included establishing a national investment bank to promote growth over cuts, public ownership of railways and the energy sector, construction of affordable homes with rent controls to ensure decent housing for all by 2025, and a fully funded National Health Service integrated with social care while ending privatization. The platform also called for ending zero-hour contracts, progressive taxation to lower the welfare bill through investment-driven growth, action on climate change, a foreign policy based on justice and international assistance, equality measures, and a lifelong national education service with universal childcare, abolition of tuition fees, restored maintenance grants, and funding for adult skills. These policies drew from traditional socialist principles, rejecting the fiscal conservatism of the outgoing leadership and critiquing both Conservative government cuts and New Labour's market-oriented approaches. Corbyn positioned his agenda as a rejection of "Tory-lite" opposition, promising instead a "fundamental shift" toward state-led economic intervention and worker protections. stances highlighted in the campaign included opposition to nuclear weapons like and a focus on Palestinian rights, aligning with his long-held anti-interventionist views. Corbyn's voter base consisted primarily of an influx of new Labour Party members and registered supporters following the party's defeat in the May 2015 general election, with membership surging from around 190,000 to over 300,000 by as individuals joined specifically to back his candidacy. He secured 59.5% of the total vote (251,417 votes) in the first round on 12 September 2015, including 57.6% from party members, 60% from affiliated supporters (such as trade unionists), and 83% from the newly introduced category of registered supporters who paid a £3 fee to participate. Demographics of his supporters skewed younger (average age around 40 for post-2015 joiners versus 50 for pre-2015 members), more urban (with 20% in compared to 8% previously), more highly educated (higher proportion of graduates), and further to the left ideologically (67% identifying as "very left-wing" versus 32% before). This base was energized by grassroots organizing, including early efforts that evolved into the group, and reflected disillusionment with centrist politics rather than traditional working-class voters.

Labour Party Leadership (2015–2020)

Internal Party Conflicts and Leadership Challenges

Following his election as Labour leader on 12 September 2015, Corbyn faced immediate resistance from the , with many MPs viewing his left-wing platform as unelectable. In appointing his , he encountered difficulties retaining centrist figures, leading to a January 2016 reshuffle where only minor changes were made despite tensions, including over differences with shadow foreign secretary . These early frictions highlighted a divide between Corbyn's supporter base and the PLP's preference for moderate policies. The crisis escalated after the EU referendum on 23 June 2016, when Corbyn's perceived lukewarm campaigning on Remain prompted Benn's sacking on 26 June, triggering mass resignations from over a dozen shadow cabinet members, including shadow health secretary and shadow education secretary . On 28 June, the PLP passed a no-confidence motion against him by 172 votes to 40, though Corbyn refused to resign, arguing his mandate came from party members. This led to a leadership challenge, first by and then ; Corbyn secured re-election on 24 September 2016 with 61.8% of the vote, bolstered by Momentum-organized support among members, but the PLP rift deepened, with ongoing parliamentary rebellions on issues like welfare reforms. A protracted antisemitism controversy further strained party unity, with complaints surging after Corbyn's 2015 election; the (EHRC) investigation concluded in October 2020 that Labour under Corbyn's leadership committed unlawful acts of harassment, discrimination, and political interference in complaints processes, including failures in training staff and providing inadequate support to Jewish members. The EHRC found that the leadership could have tackled the issue more effectively but did not, leading to over 500 complaints by 2020 and suspensions of members like ; Corbyn responded by establishing the 2016 , which cleared systemic bias but was criticized for leniency. While some internal reports later alleged factional misuse of antisemitism allegations by anti-Corbyn groups, the EHRC's statutory findings affirmed direct responsibility on the party, exacerbating distrust between Corbyn allies and pro-Israel or centrist factions. Broader leadership challenges included battles over National Executive Committee (NEC) composition, where Corbyn supporters won seats in August 2016 elections amid disputes over voting eligibility for new members, resolved by court ruling in his favor, yet he temporarily lost NEC majority support in September 2016 due to regional leader nominations. Persistent PLP rebellions—numbering over 100 MPs defying whips on key votes like the 2016 Article 50 trigger—underscored Corbyn's weak command of parliamentarians, contrasting with strong member loyalty, and fueled perceptions of a party fractured between ideological wings.

2017 General Election Campaign and Results

Prime Minister announced a snap on 18 2017, to be held on 8 June, citing the need for a stronger mandate amid Brexit negotiations and domestic stability. Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn welcomed the election, framing it as an opportunity to challenge Conservative policies and present an alternative vision. Initial polls showed Conservatives leading by over 20 points, with predictions of a Labour wipeout given internal party divisions following Corbyn's 2016 leadership survival. Labour's , titled For the Many Not the Few, was launched on 16 May 2017, promising to renationalize railways, Royal Mail, and water utilities; abolish university tuition fees; increase income tax for top earners; build 100,000 council homes annually; and scrap the nuclear program in favor of non-nuclear defenses. The document emphasized ending , investing in public services, and addressing inequality, appealing to younger voters and traditional left-wing bases despite criticism from centrists for its cost estimates exceeding £50 billion annually. Corbyn's campaign featured energetic rallies drawing large crowds, particularly among under-25s, contrasting May's more scripted appearances, and focused on issues like public service funding over details. Terrorist attacks in (22 May) and (3 June) briefly halted campaigning; Corbyn condemned the violence but linked it to failures and cuts to police numbers under Conservatives, positions that drew accusations of politicizing . In the election results declared on 9 June 2017, the Conservative Party secured 317 seats with 42.4% of the vote, falling 13 seats short of a and losing their previous working . Labour won 262 seats with 40.0% of the vote—a gain of 30 seats and the largest increase in vote share (9.6 percentage points from 2015) since 1945—driven by high youth turnout exceeding 60% in some demographics and strong performances in urban areas. Corbyn hailed the outcome as a rejection of and a revitalization of Labour's prospects, defying pre-election forecasts of defeat and bolstering his leadership position despite not forming government. The led May to form a with DUP support, highlighting the election's role in frustrating Brexit hardliners' expectations of a .

Handling of Brexit and Internal Divisions

Corbyn's response to the 2016 Brexit referendum result, in which 52% of voters supported leaving the on June 23, reflected his longstanding , having opposed EU integration measures like the in 1992. Labour under his leadership initially committed to respecting the referendum outcome while advocating for a "jobs-first" that prioritized access and a with the EU, as outlined in the party's 2017 general election . This stance aimed to reconcile the party's divided electorate, with over one-third of Labour voters having backed Leave, particularly in northern working-class areas concerned about immigration's effects on wages and services. Internal divisions intensified as pro-EU MPs, predominantly from Remain-voting southern constituencies, clashed with Corbyn's inner circle over the pace and substance of opposition to Theresa May's withdrawal agreement. In September 2017, shortly after a result that bolstered Corbyn's position, shadow cabinet members like pushed for explicit commitments to a second referendum, but Corbyn resisted, prioritizing over reversal. By December 2018, Labour tabled a in May's government amid deadlock, yet Corbyn vetoed amendments for an immediate second vote, leading to accusations of ambiguity that fueled resignations and rebellions among 50 MPs who defied the in early 2019 to support such measures. Policy shifted under mounting pressure from party activists and MPs; on January 10, 2019, Corbyn delivered a speech in proposing six tests for any deal, including protections for workers' rights and economic alignment, and suggesting a public vote if Theresa May's terms failed them. This evolved into formal backing for a confirmatory on February 25, 2019, though Corbyn maintained personal neutrality, stating he would campaign to remain only if the final deal undermined Labour values. At the Labour on September 23, 2019, Corbyn narrowly defeated a push for outright , securing a compromise policy to renegotiate Johnson's deal within three months of taking office, followed by a offering Remain alongside the new terms. These maneuvers deepened fissures, as the perceived "fudge" alienated both Leave-supporting voters in traditional heartlands—who viewed Labour as thwarting the —and pro-EU centrists who demanded unambiguous Remain advocacy. A post-2019 election review by Labour's outgoing leadership attributed significant seat losses in Brexit-voting regions, such as and , to this ambiguity, with the party's unclear position compounding Corbyn's personal unpopularity and contributing to a net loss of 60 seats. thus amplified pre-existing ideological splits between Corbyn's left-wing base and moderate factions, eroding party unity and hastening his resignation after the December 2019 defeat.

2019 General Election Defeat and Resignation

The occurred on 12 December 2019, resulting in a decisive Conservative victory under , who secured 365 seats and 43.6% of the vote. Labour, led by Corbyn, suffered its worst defeat since 1935, winning 202 seats—a net loss of 60 from 262 in —and 32.1% of the vote share, down 7.9 percentage points. The party lost key seats in traditional heartlands, particularly in Brexit-voting areas of and the , where voters shifted to the Conservatives or abstained, reflecting dissatisfaction with Labour's ambiguous stance on leaving the . Corbyn retained his Islington North constituency with a majority of 26,763 votes. In the immediate aftermath, Corbyn conceded defeat on election night, acknowledging the result as "very disappointing" and accepting responsibility for the outcome. On 14 December 2019, he announced his intention to resign as Labour leader, stating he would remain in post until a successor was elected via a leadership contest, but ruled out seeking re-election. Corbyn attributed the loss partly to the party's policy, which promised to negotiate a and then hold a with options including Remain, but criticized intense media scrutiny of his personal and family life as a contributing factor. A subsequent Labour Party internal review in 2020 highlighted multiple causal factors in the defeat, including Corbyn's leadership—polled as deeply unpopular among the electorate—and the party's protracted indecision on , which alienated both Leave and Remain supporters. Voter surveys indicated additional erosion of support due to perceptions of Labour's handling of allegations under Corbyn, alongside radical policy pledges like widespread that failed to resonate beyond urban progressive bases. Corbyn and shadow chancellor issued public apologies to party members and the public for the "catastrophic" results, with Corbyn emphasizing in letters to newspapers that Labour had "come up short." The resignation triggered a won by in April 2020, marking the end of Corbyn's tenure amid widespread calls within Labour for a shift away from his hard-left platform. Despite the electoral rout, some analysts noted Labour's vote efficiency remained higher than the Conservatives' in seat-to-vote conversion, though this did little to mitigate the strategic losses in winnable marginals.

Post-Leadership Period (2020–2024)

Whip Suspension and EHRC Antisemitism Inquiry

On 29 October , the (EHRC), a statutory body established under the Equality Act 2006, published its report following an 18-month statutory investigation into the Labour Party's handling of complaints. The inquiry, initiated in May 2019 after formal complaints from Jewish community organizations including the and Board of Deputies of British Jews, examined 70 files and interviewed witnesses, concluding that the party was responsible for three breaches of the : unlawful harassment of Jewish members, indirect discrimination against Jewish members, and a failure by party officials to protect members from discrimination. The report identified "serious failings" attributable to the leadership's political interference in complaints processes, inadequate staff training (with only three of 38 caseworkers trained on by 2019), inconsistent decision-making, and instances of antisemitic conduct such as the use of tropes implying Jewish control over media or politics. It explicitly noted that these issues occurred under Corbyn's tenure as leader from 2015 to , though it did not recommend action against him personally at that stage, instead issuing the party with an unlawful act notice and recommending an independent complaints process. In response, Corbyn issued a statement acknowledging the report's validity and committing to implement its recommendations, but he contended that "the scale of the problem was also dramatically overstated for political reasons by our opponents and certain elements of the media" and pledged to present "credible evidence" to the contrary. This prompted immediate action from the Labour Party's National Executive Committee (), which on the same day suspended Corbyn from party membership pending a formal investigation into whether his comments breached party rules, citing them as undermining the report's conclusions. Concurrently, Labour leader announced the withdrawal of the Labour whip from Corbyn, effectively removing him from the (PLP) and designating him an independent MP—a decision Starmer described as necessary because Corbyn's response "distracted from the very important report" and failed to fully accept its findings. Corbyn described the suspension as a "political" move and vowed to "strongly contest" it through the party's disputes process. The events highlighted divisions within Labour, with Corbyn's allies arguing that the EHRC report permitted members to debate the "scale" of internally, as noted in its text, and viewing the suspension as an effort to marginalize left-wing voices rather than address systemic issues. The EHRC itself later clarified in 2020 that it had not recommended Corbyn's suspension and urged the party to avoid politicizing the response, emphasizing that free expression on internal matters did not excuse undermining anti-discrimination efforts. Corbyn withdrew his initial statement on 12 , expressing regret for any offense caused, which led to his readmission to party membership on 17 after the NEC's investigation cleared him of rule breaches. However, the remained suspended, with Starmer stating it would only be restored once Corbyn demonstrated full acceptance of the report's implications, a condition tied to broader efforts to rebuild trust with Jewish communities amid documented rises in antisemitic incidents during Corbyn's , including over 100 complaints upheld as antisemitic between 2016 and 2019.

Independent MP Status and 2024 Election Run

On 29 October 2020, the Labour Party withdrew the parliamentary from Corbyn in response to his public statement disputing the scale of within the party as outlined in the Equality and Human Rights Commission's report released that day. This action resulted in Corbyn sitting as an independent for North, a position he had held continuously since 9 June 1983. The whip suspension was extended by Labour's National Executive Committee on 19 November 2020 for a minimum of three months, with no restoration occurring thereafter. During his tenure as an independent MP from late 2020 to 2024, Corbyn continued to represent constituents in Islington North while engaging in external initiatives such as the Peace and Justice Project, but he was barred by Labour's National Executive Committee from standing as the party's candidate in future elections as of 28 March 2023. Following Sunak's announcement of the general election on 22 May 2024, Corbyn confirmed on 24 May 2024 his intention to contest Islington North as an independent, stating he aimed to serve as "an independent voice for peace, justice, and equality" without affiliation to any party. In the 4 July , Corbyn secured victory in Islington North, receiving 24,120 votes for a 49.2% share of the vote, defeating Labour candidate Praful Nargund who obtained 16,873 votes (34.4%). The Green Party's Sheridan Kates placed third with 2,660 votes (5.4%), while the Conservative candidate Yen Chong received 1,803 votes (3.7%). Corbyn's margin of victory over Labour was 7,247 votes, marking his twelfth consecutive win in the constituency but the first without the Labour banner. Turnout was 60.1%, down from 75.4% in 2019.

Expulsion from Labour Party

On 28 March 2023, the Labour Party's National Executive Committee (NEC) voted 22 to 12 to approve a motion preventing the party from endorsing Corbyn as its candidate for Islington North in the next general election, citing ongoing issues related to his handling of antisemitism complaints during his leadership. This decision effectively barred him from running under the Labour banner, despite his long tenure as MP for the seat since 1983. Corbyn announced on 24 May 2024 his intention to stand as an independent candidate in North for the 4 July 2024 , rejecting Labour's exclusion and framing his campaign around local issues and broader critiques of the party's direction under . In response, the Labour Party informed Corbyn that he was no longer a member, expelling him for breaching party rules that prohibit members from opposing official Labour candidates in elections. The expulsion was procedural, aligned with Labour's under clause II.8, which deems support for other parties or candidates against Labour as grounds for termination of membership. Corbyn won the Islington North seat as an independent on 4 July 2024, securing 12,446 votes (40.0%) against Labour's 6,800 (21.8%), a result that highlighted persistent local support amid national Labour gains elsewhere. The expulsion severed his formal ties to Labour, building on his prior suspension of the parliamentary in October 2020 following comments minimizing the scale of under his leadership as outlined in the Equality and Human Rights Commission's (EHRC) report. Starmer described Corbyn's influence on party policy as "well and truly over," positioning the move as part of efforts to restore trust and unity after years of internal divisions. As of October 2025, Corbyn remains an independent MP with no reinstatement, having shifted focus to external initiatives and affiliations outside Labour structures.

Initiatives Outside Labour (2020–2025)

Peace and Justice Project Launch and Activities

The Peace and Justice Project was publicly announced by Jeremy Corbyn on 13 December 2020 as an organization dedicated to advancing social and economic justice, , and through global campaigns and solidarity-building efforts. The initiative, operating as a , positioned itself as a platform independent of traditional party structures, with an initial global conference planned for January 2021 to foster discussions on anti-war efforts and progressive alternatives. Key activities encompass hosting events and conferences, including the project's first two-day annual conference on 20–21 September 2025 at , which featured national and international speakers addressing domestic and international challenges through panels and workshops. The organization collaborates with trade unions and activist groups to support campaigns aimed at systemic change, such as demands for diplomatic , nuclear disarmament, and equitable economic policies. Additional efforts include commissioning reports on global issues, developing networks with progressive international bodies, and empowering activists via action-oriented resources and petitions. In June 2022, the project co-launched the "We All Want to Just Stop Oil" campaign in alliance with the direct-action group , merging climate activism with goals and organizing a major march in on 25 June. It has also facilitated community "news clubs" for analyzing media narratives and current events, alongside chairing expert panels and tribunals on conflict-related testimonies.

Statements on Global Conflicts Including Ukraine

Following Russia's full-scale of on February 24, 2022, Corbyn condemned the action as "wrong at every level" and described the as a "disgraceful" conflict that required immediate international intervention through the to enforce a . He emphasized over escalation, stating in August 2022 that Western countries should halt arms supplies to , as continued provisioning would only "prolong the conflict" rather than resolve it. In a 2024 parliamentary intervention, he reiterated opposition to 's use of Western-supplied weapons for deep strikes into , warning that such actions risked broader escalation without addressing the root need for negotiation. Corbyn maintained this position into 2025, expressing concern in March over reports of potential British troop deployments to and urging to prioritize de-escalation and parliamentary scrutiny. On the third anniversary of the , he renewed calls for peace talks to halt "horrendous loss of life," insisting that "there is no glory to war" and advocating a political settlement over indefinite military support. In an April 2025 update , he affirmed that the war "has to end" via a "political and negotiated settlement," while critiquing expansion as a contributing factor to tensions, though he stopped short of absolving of primary responsibility for the aggression. On the Israel-Gaza conflict, which intensified after Hamas's October 7, 2023, attacks, Corbyn accused of and the government of through arms sales and failure to impose sanctions. Through his Peace and Justice Project, he issued a January 2025 statement demanding an immediate ceasefire, accountability for "," and recognition of as essential to ending the violence. In May and June 2025, he tabled the Gaza (Independent ) Bill in to investigate involvement in Israeli operations, claiming Britain had a "legal obligation" to prevent and halt what he termed war crimes, and announced an unofficial in September to expose government roles. He described recognition of in 2025 as a "huge step forward" driven by global opinion, while criticizing the for enabling actions. Regarding Yemen, Corbyn opposed UK and US military strikes against Houthi targets in January 2024, labeling them a "reckless act of escalation" that would exacerbate death and suffering without addressing underlying regional dynamics. He highlighted Britain's prior role in supplying weapons for Saudi-led operations, which he said had already caused over 150,000 deaths by 2024, and called for halting such support to prioritize and . In January 2026, during a BBC Newsnight debate with Vanessa Neumann, Corbyn questioned the legality under international law of the US seizure of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, while Neumann defended it as the arrest of a fugitive; he acknowledged a need for change in Venezuela while emphasizing adherence to international law in response to US actions against the Maduro government. Across these conflicts, Corbyn's statements via the Peace and Justice Project consistently framed Western interventions as prolonging instability, advocating universal compassion for refugees and a "new economic order" to address root causes like inequality and , rather than hierarchical prioritization of certain victims. He urged governments to pursue peace in , the , and beyond, supporting those fleeing while rejecting arms races.

Affiliations with Stop the War Coalition

Jeremy Corbyn served as chair of the Stop the War Coalition from 2011 until September 2015, when he stepped down following his election as Labour Party leader. In his resignation statement, Corbyn described the organization as representing "the very best in British political campaigning" and expressed pride in his four-year tenure. Post-leadership, Corbyn maintained affiliations through speeches and messages of solidarity. He delivered a video message to the Stop the War Coalition's 2022 annual general meeting, emphasizing anti-war principles. In September 2022, he spoke at the coalition's fringe event during Labour's conference, addressing the conflict and calling for over escalation. Similarly, in September 2023, he sent a statement to the 2023 AGM, stating that the coalition's role "has never been as important as it is now." Corbyn has defended the Stop the War Coalition amid criticisms, including accusations of anti-Western bias and excusing aggression by adversaries of the and . In December 2015, he praised it as a "vital democratic force" at a fundraising event, rejecting claims of extremism within the group. Critics, including Labour leader in February 2022, have accused the coalition of providing aid to authoritarians like by opposing support for . The organization has faced backlash for hosting figures associated with controversial regimes and for positions perceived as one-sided, such as apparent support for Russia's 2014 annexation of . Corbyn's continued engagement, including a March 2022 rally speech interrupted by protesters chanting "shame on you," underscores ongoing ties despite such controversies.

Formation of New Political Party (2025)

Announcement with Zarah Sultana

On 24 July 2025, Jeremy Corbyn and Zarah Sultana jointly announced the formation of "Your Party," a new left-wing political entity aimed at challenging what they described as a "rigged" political and economic system favoring the wealthy. In a public statement, the pair positioned the party as a vehicle for "real change," emphasizing grassroots democracy and opposition to entrenched power structures, with Sultana highlighting the need to "take on the rich and powerful" after her departure from Labour earlier that month. This announcement followed Sultana's resignation from Labour on 7 July 2025, citing the party's shift under Keir Starmer as incompatible with her socialist principles, and built on Corbyn's existing independent status after his 2020 whip suspension and 2024 Labour expulsion. The joint declaration underscored a collaborative model, with both figures presented as co-founders committed to transforming the "post-Labour left" into a formal electoral force, though early tensions emerged over organizational control, including Sultana's accusations of a "sexist boys' club" in party setup discussions by mid-September. Despite these frictions, the announcement garnered initial support from leftist activists and former Labour members disillusioned with the party's centrist pivot, with organizers framing it as a "democratic " against corporate influence and policies. Sultana, the 31-year-old MP for Coventry South since , brought a younger, diverse profile to the venture, contrasting Corbyn's veteran status, while both invoked themes of economic redistribution and central to Corbyn's prior . Public reception to the announcement was polarized, with proponents viewing it as a revival of Corbynism's momentum—evident in his surprise surge during the 2017 election—while critics, including Labour officials, dismissed it as a fringe effort unlikely to exceed the electoral thresholds faced by past socialist splinters like or the Socialist Labour Party. The party's website launched concurrently, outlining a mission for a "fair society for all" through policies like wealth taxes and public ownership, though formal registration with the Electoral Commission was pending as of the announcement. By early October 2025, reconciliation efforts culminated in a joint appearance at St George's Hall in , signaling resolve to proceed despite internal disputes.

Proposed Constitution and Internal Structures

The draft constitution for Your Party, released in October 2025, emphasizes enhanced internal through mechanisms such as digital member input for policy amendments, followed by voting at the party's inaugural conference in on 29-30 November 2025 by sortition-selected delegates, and culminating in an all-member vote. It includes provisions allowing midterm removal of elected officers if member is lost, aiming to address past Labour Party issues with unaccountable leadership. However, these proposals emerged amid internal rifts, including debates over central control versus grassroots input, with one faction led by climate activist Roger Hallam advocating for thousands of local assemblies to feed into —a model scaled back to 12 regional assemblies with 13,000 delegates before being largely sidelined by party bureaucrats, prompting a split by early October 2025. Leadership is structured around a single leader elected via one-member-one-vote, with the process set to begin in January 2026 and conclude by 31 March 2026; the term lasts up to 21 months, after which the 21-member Central Executive Committee (CEC) reviews options, subject to a vote at the 2027 annual conference. The CEC comprises 16 members directly elected by the membership and 2 reserved seats for MPs (who are barred from chairing), with responsibilities including candidate approval and financial oversight. Until a permanent leader is chosen, an interim oversight body known as the Independent Alliance of MPs—comprising Jeremy Corbyn, Zarah Sultana, and others such as Ayoub Khan and Shockat Adam—stewards operations, with rules prohibiting leadership candidates from managing elections to ensure impartiality. These structures reflect efforts to foster a "democratic " by transforming the post-Labour left into a formalized entity, yet they have been critiqued for insufficient integration of trade unions and workers' organizations, with no explicit provisions in the draft for their formal role despite the party's socialist orientation. Internal tensions, including accusations of unilateral actions by Sultana and claims of a "sexist boys' club" favoring Corbyn's circle, have influenced stricter procedures to prevent factional misuse of selection processes, though full implementation remains contested. Membership rules opened rapidly in September 2025, attracting over 20,000 sign-ups in initial hours, underscoring early enthusiasm but also highlighting risks of rapid growth outpacing stable governance.

Early Membership Drive and Reception

Following the announcement of Your Party on 24 July 2025, initial efforts to build membership encountered significant disarray, including public disputes between co-founders Jeremy Corbyn and over the establishment of an official enrollment process. In early September 2025, Sultana unilaterally launched an online membership portal, which promptly crashed amid high traffic and was subsequently criticized by Corbyn and allied independents as unauthorized and potentially fraudulent, prompting its closure. Sultana responded by accusing elements within the nascent organization of operating a "sexist boys' club," highlighting tensions over control and structure that delayed formal recruitment. On 24 September 2025, Corbyn publicly apologized for the "confusion" surrounding these developments and declared membership officially open, with a founding conference scheduled for to solidify the party's framework. Prior to this, a preliminary online call for support garnered over 700,000 sign-ups within one week in early August 2025, indicating substantial grassroots interest among left-wing voters disillusioned with Labour under . However, these figures represented expressions of intent rather than verified paid memberships, and the party issued warnings against premature or unofficial enrollments to prevent further mishaps. Reception to the drive was polarized, with enthusiastic backing from Corbyn's long-standing supporters in anti-establishment and socialist circles, contrasted by skepticism from mainstream observers and rival left-wing groups over the internal fractures. Media coverage emphasized the launch's chaos as emblematic of broader challenges in unifying the post-Labour left, including risks of escalating infighting that could undermine viability ahead of the party's planned leadership contest in early 2026. By mid-October 2025, despite the hurdles, the initiative had reconciled key figures like Corbyn and Sultana, positioning Your Party as a potential vehicle for a "democratic revolution" on the British left, though critics from Trotskyist outlets argued it fell short of forming a truly mass socialist alternative.

Policy Positions and Ideology

Economic Policies and Critiques of Capitalism

Jeremy Corbyn has consistently advocated for socialist economic policies emphasizing public ownership, increased state intervention, and opposition to measures implemented by Conservative governments since 2010. As Labour leader from 2015 to 2020, his platform rejected in favor of deficit-financed public investment, arguing that exacerbated inequality and stifled growth. In 2015, over 40 economists, including former adviser , endorsed Corbyn's anti- approach, asserting it aligned with Keynesian principles of counter-cyclical spending. Corbyn's 2017 Labour manifesto, titled For the Many, Not the Few, proposed renationalizing railways as franchises expired, alongside commitments to scrap tuition fees, introduce a National Service, and raise the to £10 per hour by 2020. The document outlined funding through reversing corporation tax cuts, introducing a 45% top rate for earnings over £150,000, and a one-off 1% on assets exceeding £500,000, projected to generate £6.3 billion annually. In the 2019 manifesto, these expanded to include public ownership of , networks, and the Royal Mail, with a £250 billion national transformation fund for and a Green funded partly by an 11% on oil and gas firms. Critiquing , Corbyn described it as a "greed-is-good" system responsible for the 2008 financial crash and regional deprivation, vowing in a 2018 speech to replace it with an economy prioritizing people over profits. He argued neoliberal policies had broken public services and widened inequality, proposing rent controls, anti-gentrification measures, and worker representation on corporate boards to rebalance power dynamics without fully abolishing private enterprise. In a 2013 address, Corbyn defended as a viable alternative, citing historical public ownership successes and critiquing capitalism's tendency toward boom-bust cycles and exploitation. Polls in 2017 showed majority public support for his plans, particularly for rail (76%) and (82%), reflecting dissatisfaction with privatized service quality.

Foreign Policy Views Including Middle East

Corbyn has consistently opposed British military interventions abroad, voting against the 2003 authorization on March 18, 2003, arguing it would fuel regional instability and . He similarly criticized the 2011 NATO-led intervention in , warning in parliamentary debates that it risked creating a power vacuum exploited by extremists, as evidenced by subsequent civil war and militia proliferation. Regarding , Corbyn opposed proposed airstrikes in 2013 against the Assad regime following chemical attacks and again in 2015 against , calling on August 29, 2013, for UN-led diplomacy instead of unilateral action, and tabling a no-confidence motion in the government's approach on November 21, 2015. On nuclear policy and alliances, Corbyn has advocated unilateral disarmament, stating on July 25, 2016, during Labour leadership questions, "I am opposed to the use of nuclear weapons. I am opposed to the holding of nuclear weapons," and opposing the 2016 Trident renewal as an escalation risking proliferation rather than security. He has expressed reservations about NATO's post-Cold War expansion, suggesting in a context a need for reform to prioritize over buildup, though he later clarified support for the alliance's defensive core while critiquing its interventions. In the Middle East, Corbyn's views center on Palestinian self-determination and criticism of Israeli policies, campaigning since the 1980s for UK recognition of Palestine and a two-state solution based on 1967 borders. He has condemned Israeli settlement expansion and military actions in Gaza, describing the post-October 7, 2023, conflict as involving "genocide" risks in a September 3, 2025, announcement to lead an unofficial tribunal examining UK complicity in arms supplies and failure to halt operations. Corbyn has engaged directly with Palestinian representatives, meeting Hamas officials in Ramallah on August 2010 during a solidarity visit and inviting Hamas and Hezbollah delegates to a 2009 parliamentary meeting on the Middle East, later defending such contacts on July 4, 2016, as essential for peace processes despite regretting a 2014 reference to them as "friends" at a pro-Palestine event. These engagements, including chairing a 2012 Qatar panel with a Hamas leader, have drawn accusations of legitimizing designated terrorist groups, though Corbyn attributes them to fostering dialogue amid stalled negotiations.

Social and Environmental Stances

Corbyn has long opposed , citing risks to ecosystems and , and argued against its inclusion in climate strategies despite Labour's later shifts toward net-zero targets by 2050. He pledged to ban outright, phase out all coal-fired power stations, and accelerate deployment through community-owned generation and renationalization of the energy grid. In 2016, he outlined a "green industrial revolution" plan integrating with job creation in renewables, while urging declaration of a national climate emergency to prioritize emissions reductions. On social issues, Corbyn has maintained that EU immigration levels are not too high and criticized political rhetoric denigrating migrants' economic and cultural contributions. He advocates compassionate policies toward refugees and opposes restrictive controls, framing migration as a net benefit without of wage suppression in his public statements. Corbyn supports self-identification for individuals' gender, pledging in Labour's to simplify legal recognition processes without medical gatekeeping. He endorsed allowing transwomen to stand on Labour's women-only shortlists, stating party policy should prioritize self-declared identity over biological sex criteria. Regarding reproductive rights, Corbyn committed to safeguarding access, opposing restrictions on telemedicine provisions like at-home pill use and emphasizing its protection under law. On , he backed decriminalizing possession of small amounts of while prioritizing medical legalization, advocating rapid availability of cannabis oil for therapeutic purposes without full recreational endorsement. Corbyn has condemned , , and microaggressions against women, calling for systemic reductions in violence statistics through policy interventions.

Major Controversies

Antisemitism Allegations and EHRC Findings

Allegations of within the Labour Party escalated following Jeremy Corbyn's election as leader on 12 September 2015, with formal complaints to the party rising from fewer than 10 per year prior to 2015 to hundreds annually by 2018. The (EHRC) later documented over 220 antisemitic allegations against party members since 2011, including at least 170 complaints that went unacted upon between November 2016 and February 2018 according to a leaked internal report. Specific incidents linked to Corbyn included his 2012 comment defending a titled "Freedom for Humanity," which depicted stereotypical Jewish figures controlling global finance through puppetry—a trope associated with theories—stating that its removal would be "ridiculous" and praising the as having "never had a problem with him." Corbyn later expressed regret in 2018, describing the comment as "over-robust" but initially resisting calls to condemn the imagery outright. Another prominent case involved , a former Labour and Corbyn ally, who on 28 April 2016 claimed that "supported " before "going mad," defending MP amid her own over sharing a post suggesting Israel's relocation to the . Livingstone's remarks, which distorted historical Nazi policies toward Jewish emigration in , prompted his immediate suspension from the party. Corbyn initially described the comments as "grossly offensive" but resisted pressure to expel Livingstone, ordering a new National Constitutional Committee investigation in April 2017 after the initial process was criticized for leniency; Livingstone was eventually expelled in 2018. The EHRC later ruled Livingstone's statements constituted unlawful harassment by a party agent, contributing to findings of a pattern where serious antisemitic acts were met with lenient responses. The EHRC launched a statutory investigation in December 2018, prompted by complaints from groups including the and , focusing on whether Labour had unlawfully against Jewish members in handling complaints from 2016 onward. Its October 2020 report concluded that Labour was responsible for three breaches of the : unlawful indirect through political interference in complaints and inadequate staff training, and direct in cases involving antisemitic tropes or dismissal of complaints as "smears" or "fake." Reviewing 70 sampled files—mostly social media-related—the EHRC identified 23 instances of interference by Corbyn's Leader of the Opposition's Office (LOTO), including efforts to halt investigations into politically sensitive cases, and noted missing records in 62 files alongside delays in 39. The report stated that could have been "effectively remedied" if the under Corbyn from 2015 to 2020 had prioritized it, but a culture prevailed where complaints were often downplayed, fostering an environment of intimidation for Jewish members. The EHRC issued 10 recommendations, including prohibiting political interference, establishing an independent complaints body, mandatory training within six months, and transparent reporting of outcomes. Corbyn responded on 29 October 2020 by accepting the recommendations but asserting that "the scale of the problem was also dramatically overstated for political reasons by our opponents" and that progress had been substantial, a statement Labour's new leader deemed unacceptable, leading to Corbyn's immediate administrative suspension from the party. The suspension was later converted to loss of the Labour whip, with Corbyn sitting as an independent MP until partial readmission in November 2020, though he remained barred from party activities; the EHRC findings underscored systemic failures rather than isolated incidents, attributing responsibility to leadership inaction. In February 2026, Corbyn amplified unverified claims from the director of Gaza's Al-Shifa Hospital alleging that the IDF returned boxes containing mutilated Palestinian bodies, including skulls and women's remains missing organs, implying organ harvesting. These allegations were rejected by the IDF as baseless propaganda, and described by critics including the Israeli Embassy and UK Jewish groups as recycled antisemitic tropes and a modern blood libel.

Associations with Militant Groups and Terror Sympathies

In 2009, Jeremy Corbyn hosted an event at the and referred to representatives of and —both organizations with military wings designated as terrorist groups by the UK government—as "friends," stating: "It will be an event in Parliament, where our friends from will be speaking. I have also invited friends from to come and speak as well." Corbyn later described the remark as "inclusive language" intended to foster dialogue and expressed regret for its use, while maintaining that such engagements aimed to promote peace discussions. Corbyn has met Hamas officials on multiple occasions, including a 2010 trip to Gaza funded by an Islamist lobby group, during which he engaged with senior members without disclosing the funding source initially, and a 2015 parliamentary meeting with Hamas supporters shortly before his Labour leadership bid. In 2012, he shared a stage with Mousa Abu Marzook, a co-founder of Hamas designated as a terrorist by the US, at a conference in Tehran. Corbyn defended these interactions as efforts to include diverse voices in debates on Middle East peace, though critics, including UK Jewish organizations, argued they legitimized groups committed to Israel's destruction via charters calling for violence against Jews. Regarding Irish republicanism, Corbyn attended commemorations for IRA members killed in the Troubles, such as wreath-laying at sites of IRA bombings, and co-chaired the Connolly Association in the 1990s, a group with historical pro-IRA sympathies whose activities prompted police investigations in the 1980s and early 1990s for potential links to paramilitary funding. In 2019, he co-sponsored an event featuring a convicted IRA bomber responsible for the 1973 Old Bailey attack. Corbyn consistently denied supporting IRA violence, emphasizing his role in backchannel peace talks with Sinn Féin and IRA figures from the 1980s onward to end the conflict, and condemned specific bombings while advocating for republican political goals like a united Ireland. Corbyn was photographed in 2014 at a event alongside Maher Taher, a leader of the Popular Front for the Liberation of (PFLP), a Marxist-Leninist group proscribed as terrorist by the and EU for plane hijackings and attacks including the 1976 . He claimed unawareness of Taher's presence and militant affiliations at the time. These associations drew accusations of terror sympathies from opponents, who cited patterns of platforming or praising figures from groups employing violence against civilians, contrasted by Corbyn's framing of them as necessary for conflict resolution absent mainstream alternatives.

Impact on Labour's Electoral Viability and Party Unity

Corbyn's election as Labour leader in September 2015, securing 59.5% of the vote amid low initial turnout among full members, immediately fractured party unity, with 172 of 232 Labour MPs nominating other candidates and subsequently passing a no-confidence motion against him by 172 to 40 in June 2016 following mass shadow cabinet resignations triggered by the Brexit referendum. This internal strife reflected a chasm between the surging grassroots membership, which ballooned from approximately 190,000 in May 2015 to over 550,000 by September 2016—driven by Corbyn's anti-austerity appeal and the creation of groups like Momentum—and the parliamentary party, where centrists viewed his leadership as ideologically rigid and electorally toxic. These divisions persisted through two leadership challenges in 2016, where Corbyn retained support from members but alienated MPs, culminating in deselection threats against critics and the expulsion of figures like NEC member Peter Willsman for controversial statements. The crisis, escalating from 2015 with complaints of tolerance toward anti-Israel rhetoric morphing into tropes, further eroded cohesion; the Equality and Commission's 2020 found Labour under Corbyn responsible for unlawful acts of and , including political interference in complaints processes, which prompted high-profile resignations and suspensions. Electorally, Corbyn's tenure yielded mixed but ultimately damaging results. In the 2017 snap election, Labour gained 30 seats to reach 262, with a 40% popular vote share—its highest since 1997—buoyed by youth mobilization and unpopularity, though Corbyn's personal net approval hovered around -20 among the general public. However, the 2019 election saw catastrophic losses, with Labour's seats plummeting to 202 and vote share to 32.1%—its worst performance since 1935—attributed in party reviews to Corbyn's unpopularity, ambiguity (pledging to renegotiate then campaign against withdrawal), and the antisemitism scandal, which alienated Jewish voters and moderates while failing to consolidate left-wing support. Polling data underscored viability erosion: Corbyn's favorability among Labour voters declined from positive peaks post-2017 to net negatives by , with surveys indicating the would perform 10-15 points better under alternative leaders, as his associations and policy stances—deemed too radical by —repelled swing voters in key seats lost to Conservatives and Party. This internal polarization, prioritizing ideological purity over broad appeal, contributed causally to Labour's prolonged opposition wilderness, enabling Boris Johnson's 80-seat majority and delaying recovery until Keir Starmer's centrist pivot in 2020.

Personal Life and Beliefs

Marriages and Family

Corbyn married his first wife, , in 1974 after meeting her while campaigning for local elections; the marriage ended in in 1979 with no children from the union. In 1987, Corbyn wed Claudia Bracchitta, a Chilean exile who fled the Pinochet regime, and they had three sons: Benjamin (born 1987), Sebastian (born circa 1992), and Thomas (born 1994). The couple divorced in 1999 amid disagreements over education; Bracchitta sought to enroll their eldest son Benjamin in a selective due to concerns about the local comprehensive's performance, while Corbyn insisted on the state comprehensive, leading to their separation. Benjamin later pursued a career as a football coach, while details on Sebastian and Thomas remain limited in public records. Corbyn's third marriage occurred in 2012 to Laura Álvarez, a Mexican-born and former investment banker, in a at a near ; the couple has no children together and Álvarez has maintained a low public profile.

Vegetarianism, Allotment Gardening, and Anti-Monarchism

Corbyn adopted vegetarianism in 1969 at age 20 while working on a pig farm in Jamaica, where he developed an attachment to the animals and ceased eating meat. By 2017, he had maintained the diet for nearly 50 years, expressing opposition to practices such as vivisection, foie gras production, fur farming, and hunting. Although he considered transitioning to veganism in 2017, citing health benefits from increased plant-based eating, Corbyn remained vegetarian, describing himself as enthusiastic about vegan food options without fully committing. Corbyn has cultivated an allotment in since approximately 2003, using it to grow including marrows, potatoes, camomile, apples, and artichokes. In 2017, he pledged to retain the plot even if elected , emphasizing its role in maintaining work-life balance amid political demands. He views allotments as vital for sustainable food production, community cohesion, and environmental connection, criticizing proposals in 2025 to sell off public plots for housing as a threat to this tradition. Corbyn holds republican views opposing hereditary monarchy as incompatible with democratic equality, though he has repeatedly stated that abolition is not a policy priority. In 2015, during his swearing-in to the , he declined to kneel before Queen Elizabeth II, signaling personal discomfort with monarchical rituals while affirming loyalty to the sovereign as . During a , he described the royal family as requiring "a bit of a shake-up" to address wealth disparities and modern relevance, prompting audience jeers. Corbyn has avoided singing the at state events, consistent with his longstanding critique of monarchical pomp over substantive governance reforms.

Police Caution for Refusing to Give Evidence

In June 1986, Jeremy Corbyn joined a protest organized by the Troops Out Movement outside the in , demonstrating solidarity with defendants on trial for IRA terrorism offenses, including Patrick Magee, convicted for the that targeted Conservative Party leaders in 1984. Police instructed the protesters, numbering around 20, to relocate from the pavement to avoid obstructing the highway; Corbyn and 15 others declined to comply, resulting in their arrest for wilful obstruction under section 137 of the Highways Act 1980. Corbyn was held for approximately five hours at Cannon Row police station before release on pending further inquiries; ultimately, no formal charges were pursued, consistent with outcomes for minor public order disruptions resolved without prosecution. This event exemplifies Corbyn's pattern of in support of perceived political injustices, particularly regarding , where he prioritized protest over immediate compliance with directives.

Reception and Legacy

Supporters' Perspectives on Achievements

Supporters credit Jeremy Corbyn with revitalizing the Labour Party's grassroots base, as membership surged from 388,000 in mid-2015 to a record 564,000 by early 2016, driven by his candidacy's appeal to voters alienated by previous leadership's centrist policies and measures. This expansion, which persisted above 500,000 through much of his tenure, is viewed by advocates as evidence of successfully reorienting the party toward socialist principles and broader public engagement, including heightened youth participation and activism. The 2017 general election stands as a pivotal accomplishment in supporters' assessments, with Labour gaining 30 seats to reach 262 amid a national vote share of 40 percent—up from 30.4 percent in 2015—resulting in a that thwarted Theresa May's bid for a strengthened Conservative majority. Proponents argue this outcome defied widespread predictions of Labour's collapse, attributing it to Corbyn's energetic campaigning, the ’s emphasis on public ownership and investment over , and resonance with younger demographics who increased turnout significantly. On economic policy, backers praise Corbyn's advocacy against fiscal conservatism, which garnered support from over 40 economists including a former Bank of England adviser, for challenging dominant narratives on deficit reduction and promoting alternatives like infrastructure spending and nationalization of key utilities. This stance is said to have restored Labour's moral purpose and influenced subsequent policy debates, even if not fully enacted. In , supporters highlight Corbyn's opposition to military interventions, notably his mobilization of Labour MPs to defeat the 2013 motion for Syrian airstrikes by a 13-vote margin, which they maintain averted deeper UK entanglement in the conflict. His consistent anti-war record, including chairing the and receiving the Peace Prize in 2011, is lauded for prioritizing and over neoconservative approaches.

Critics' Assessments of Failures and Risks

Critics, including former Labour Party leaders and MPs, have attributed Labour's defeat—resulting in 202 seats and 32.1% of the vote share, down from 262 seats and 40% in —to Corbyn's leadership style and indecisiveness on , which alienated both Remain and Leave voters in key seats. A party-commissioned review highlighted a "dysfunctional" and "toxic culture" under Corbyn, marked by internal sabotage and failure to address electoral vulnerabilities, exacerbating the loss to the Conservatives' 365 seats. Corbyn himself acknowledged the "catastrophic" result in apologies to voters, while figures like accepted blame for strategic shortcomings. On party unity, detractors such as over 60 Labour peers accused Corbyn of failing leadership tests by tolerating factionalism and , leading to resignations and a "litany of mistakes" in handling internal disputes. This contributed to repeated no-confidence motions, with MPs lambasting him in meetings for neglecting core issues like probes, risking permanent schisms within the party. Economic policies drew sharp rebukes for impracticality, with analysts warning that proposals like and widespread nationalizations could trigger , , and market shocks akin to historical socialist experiments. Critics, including those from the , argued these measures ignored fiscal constraints, potentially harming low-income groups through devaluation rather than aiding them. In , opponents labeled Corbyn a " threat" due to his anti-NATO stance, reluctance on nuclear deterrence, and past associations with groups like and the IRA, which they viewed as compromising alliances and emboldening adversaries. Reports from think tanks like the assessed that a Corbyn risked weakening transatlantic ties and counter-terrorism efforts, prioritizing anti-interventionism over pragmatic defense. Overall, assessments from political scientists and ex-officials portray Corbyn's tenure as heightening Labour's existential risks, with structural and personal factors amplifying electoral irrelevance and ideological that deterred moderate voters.

Media Portrayals and Long-Term Political Influence

Media coverage of Jeremy Corbyn during his Labour leadership frequently emphasized controversies surrounding his stances, associations, and handling of internal issues, with multiple academic and media analyses documenting a predominance of negative framing. A 2016 study by the London School of Economics examined press representations from August to September 2015 and found that Corbyn was subjected to vilification, with portrayals often deviating from standard journalistic norms by prioritizing ridicule over substantive policy discussion. Similarly, the Media Reform Coalition's analysis of Corbyn's first week as leader in September 2015 revealed that 60% of press articles focused on negative topics such as his appearance, refusal to sing the , and perceived unelectability, compared to minimal coverage of his economic proposals. These patterns persisted, with a 2016 review in noting that over 50% of news coverage was critical or antagonistic, spanning outlets from right-leaning tabloids to centrist broadsheets. Public perception aligned with these findings, as a 2016 YouGov poll indicated that 97% of respondents believed deliberately biased coverage against Corbyn, though this view was more prevalent among Labour supporters. reporting drew particular scrutiny; a 2017 linguistic of broadcast segments concluded that subtle tonal elements, such as ironic phrasing and selective visuals, conveyed partiality against Corbyn, altering interpretations of neutral facts. Coverage intensified on issues like allegations and ambiguity, where outlets like and ran extensive critical pieces, but empirical content audits showed imbalances in source selection, favoring anti-Corbyn Labour figures over his defenders. While some negative portrayals reflected genuine policy critiques—such as Corbyn's historical opposition to interventions—the disproportionate focus on personal traits over platforms suggested agenda-setting driven by ideological opposition to his left-wing economics, as evidenced by three-quarters of reports misrepresenting his views in a 2020 leadership study. Corbyn's long-term influence on UK politics manifests in a polarized legacy: galvanizing a surge in youth and grassroots mobilization within Labour, yet contributing to the party's worst electoral defeat since 1935 in December 2019, where Labour secured only 202 seats amid voter concerns over his . This outcome prompted a centrist pivot under , who won the 2024 general election with 412 seats by distancing from Corbynite policies on issues like and foreign alliances, effectively marginalizing the party's left wing through rule changes and expulsions. Corbyn himself, barred from Labour candidacy in 2024, retained his North seat as an independent with 42% of the vote, preserving a personal base but underscoring his isolation from mainstream Labour. By 2025, Corbyn's influence endures through attempts to establish a new left-wing entity, "Your Party," announced in July amid dissatisfaction with Starmer's government on austerity and Gaza policy, potentially fragmenting the left vote in future elections. His tenure normalized anti-establishment rhetoric and economic redistribution debates within Labour's membership, boosting left-leaning policies like tuition fee pledges that influenced Starmer's cautious adaptations, though empirical voting data post-2019 indicates sustained wariness among working-class and older demographics toward Corbyn-associated figures. Overall, while Corbyn's era exposed media-pressured vulnerabilities in left populism, it entrenched factional divides, limiting his broader transformative impact beyond inspirational surges in 2017's near-miss election.

References

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