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Ex-kibbutznik who is Corbyn’s left-hand man

In his first in-depth interview, the founder of Momentum talks about being politicised in Israel, family trauma and how Labour can win over Jewish voters

January 28, 2016 09:38
Jon Lansman at work in Momentum’s Euston office

By

Rosa Doherty,

Rosa Doherty

8 min read

He is credited with being one of the key figures behind Jeremy Corbyn's election as leader of the Labour Party - the driving force behind an increasingly influential hard-left movement.

So it is a surprise to find Jon Lansman sitting at a desk in a run-down office, where, instead of aides bustling around him, there are sparsely populated meeting rooms and eerily quiet corridors.

Mr Lansman is the founder of the controversial "Corbynista" pressure group, Momentum, which was set up to capture and retain the grassroots enthusiasm sparked by Mr Corbyn's campaign, but whose opponents fear will purge the party of moderates. It is becoming, they say, a "party within a party".

Having spent more than 30 years in the political shadows, relatively little is known about Mr Lansman. But in his first in-depth interview, he describes what happened behind the scenes in the astonishing leadership contest that saw Mr Corbyn take power, and how the "radicalism" of kibbutz life in Israel sparked a fervour in him that has fuelled his career.