The Independent

McDonnell: Corbyn will step down if Labour fails to win general election

- ROB MERRICK DEPUTY POLITICAL EDITOR

Jeremy Corbyn will quit if Labour loses the general election expected within months, says his key ally John McDonnell – promising to follow him out of the door.

The shadow chancellor insisted Labour could win a Commons majority – despite the party’s disastrous poll ratings – but admitted the price of failure would be resignatio­n.

Asked if Mr Corbyn could “stay on”, Mr McDonnell replied: “I can’t see so. What we’d do is as the tradition, which is have an election for a new leader.”

Speaking to Alastair Campbell, in an interview for GQ own personal position.”

magazine, he also said: “I think it is the same for my

Mr McDonnell also insisted he backed Mr Corbyn’s determinat­ion to fight an election before a fresh Brexit referendum is held – but admitted a Final Say referendum could yet come first.

“Within parliament itself there is a large number of people who are saying we’d rather have a referendum attached to any deal,” he acknowledg­ed.

And he added: “Once we get to the stage of blocking no deal, a general election is on the table. If we can’t get that general election, the referendum becomes an option.”

The Independen­t revealed yesterday that Labour MPs are bombarding the party whips’ office with demands for Mr Corbyn to back a referendum first.

In the interview, Mr McDonnell also:

* Ruled out a coalition deal with the Scottish National Party, or the Liberal Democrats, if Labour falls short of a majority – insisting Mr Corbyn would put forward his programme and challenge the other parties to vote it down.

* Denied Mr Corbyn had been “dragged kicking and screaming” into supporting a Final Say public vote, saying: “He hasn’t. You’re wrong on this.”

* Argued “climate change is the big issue now”, which meant the election would be “more than a class revolution”.

* Denied Labour at Westminste­r was riven by splits, insisting: “I’ve never seen the parliament­ary Labour Party more united in the last couple of years.”

* Suggested Boris Johnson is as extreme as Donald Trump, saying: “I think it is very difficult to see anything between them.”

* Described his 70-year-old leader’s fitness as “unbelievab­le”, saying: “He’s running every morning. Jeremy is the fittest person I know.”

* Admitted the attempt to remove Tom Watson as deputy leader, on the eve of Labour’s conference last month, had been “a fiasco” – but insisted Mr Corbyn “wasn’t aware” of it in advance.

On Labour’s election chances, Mr McDonnell denied the poll ratings – putting Labour in the low twenties – meant “the country has just decided Jeremy is not going to be prime minister”.

He insisted Mr Johnson “has got vulnerabil­ities just as much as Theresa May that we can expose and exploit in a campaign”.

“I’m not being unrealisti­c, but the political climate is incredibly unpredicta­ble,” Mr McDonnell said, adding: “I think we can win a majority.”

 ?? (PA) ?? The shadow chancellor also said a Final Say referendum could come first
(PA) The shadow chancellor also said a Final Say referendum could come first

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