E ver since Keir Starmer began shoving Labour rightwards in 2020, a space has been opening up in British politics. The limited enthusiasm for Labour at the election and since has widened that space further, as has a more general dissatisfaction: a common feeling that our party system doesn’t properly represent voters on many issues, from inequality to Gaza. Until recently, the pandemic and then the protracted collapse of the Conservative government distracted most people from this void to the left of Labour.
The fact that the more radical leadership of his predecessor ended badly , with Labour’s heavy 2019 defeat, also discouraged further leftwing experiments. Of the many thousands who had been drawn in by Corbynism, some left Labour for the Greens, while others gave up on party politics, threatening to become a lost generation of progressives. Yet now this period of depression and relative inactivity on the left may be ending.
At public and private meetings, in online discussions, independent parliamentary campaigns and other mobilisations, a growing range of leftists, from young ex-Corbynistas to union veterans, are becoming convinced that a new leftwing party is both necessary and timely. “There is a political opening,” says a former senior adviser to Jeremy Corbyn who, like many of those exploring the possibility of a new party, prefers to speak anonymously. “There’s a good chunk of the population in the progressive tent who thought a Labour government would b.