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Oliver Kamm

ByOliver Kamm, Oliver Kamm

Opinion

My regrets at being exiled

October 1, 2015 11:56
2 min read

Politics has all changed, and at the same time not changed at all. Over the past few weeks, almost all JC regular columnists, including me, have had something to say about the implausible rise of Jeremy Corbyn to lead Britain's main opposition party.

It is extraordinary that the far left, which has never before held power in the Labour Party, now dominates it. Yet the likelihood that Mr Corbyn can defy electoral history and win office on a programme so fantastical is extremely remote.

My guess - and it's scarcely a rash prediction - is that Labour under Mr Corbyn cannot recover and will be severely bloodied in the 2020 election. And I regret that, because I want a moderate, reformist left-of-centre party to be at least a plausible contender for office. Such a party usually wins my vote; a party led by Mr Corbyn will not.

Yet Labour's trajectory has big costs not only for itself. It has caused serious concern among British Jews, and with reason.