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Jeremy Corbyn accuses the press of a smear over spy claims – it’s a tactic we’ve seen from him before

The Labour leader's actions reveal a man who campaigns to be Prime Minister while apparently pledging to restrain our democratic rights.

February 21, 2018 12:32
Jeremy Corbyn (Picture: PA)
2 min read

"Change is coming." Jeremy Corbyn’s threat to the country’s most popular newspapers on Tuesday night caused quite a stir.

The spark for his menacing social media video was the reports, led by the Sun and followed by the Daily Mail, the Telegraph and others, about Mr Corbyn’s alleged relationship with a Czechoslovakian spy during the Cold War.

I find it highly unlikely that the current Labour leader collaborated with Czech spooks – what useful information could he have imparted? More likely, as Mark Urban, the BBC Newsnight journalist, tweeted, Mr Corbyn was naïve in who he met in the late 1980s; just as he has been ever since.

The leader of the opposition’s apparent desire to curb the freedom of the press, one of the fundamental rights of our democracy, comes as no surprise. It is straight out of the playbook used by his friends in Iran, Venezuela and Cuba.