Matt Singh, Columnist

The Labour Party’s Long Road Back

As the party chooses Jeremy Corbyn’s successor, it would do well to understand exactly why he failed. 

Labour must choose wisely.

Photographer: Stefan Rousseau - PA Images/PA Images
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Two months after suffering its worst general election result for 84 years, Britain’s Labour Party continues to pick up the pieces. While Boris Johnson’s Conservatives govern with an 80-seat majority in the House of Commons, Labour is simultaneously reflecting on its thrashing and electing a successor to outgoing leader Jeremy Corbyn.

This week saw the publication by Lord Ashcroft -- a Conservative peer but whose research is generally accepted as non-partisan -- of a report into Labour’s defeat. The report highlighted a number of issues that doomed Labour, including Corbyn's leadership, the flip-flopping over Brexit, a domestic platform that wasn’t seen as credible and obsession with fringe liberal issues. But the common theme throughout was the party’s failure to listen.