Owen Jones cuts the umbilical cord

Owen Jones screengrab from his latest podcast, below

JVL Introduction

Owen Jones has left the Labour party after being a member for 24 years.

He gives three reasons, all of which resonate with millions of those who supported Labour before Starmer”

  • The leadership lies, abandoning its pledges and running an authoritarianism without precedent in the party’s history.
  • Labour’s policies are virtually indistinguishable from the Tories
  • Its position on the Gaza crisis represents a complete moral collapse

Jones has set up a campaign fund — We Deserve Better — to support independent left and Green Party candidates in that election.

We repost here an editorial from the Morning Star and Jones’s own podcast explaining his decision.

RK


Owen Jones tearing up his membership card indicts Starmer’s Labour

Morning Star, Editorial, 21 March 2024

Owen Jones’s decision to abandon the Labour Party after 21 years of membership will surely resonate.

The commentator has a vast social media reach and attained near-iconic status with his books on class and his activism, particularly during the years of Jeremy Corbyn’s leadership.

The reasons for his departure are shared by the hundreds of thousands of former party members who have preceded him through the exit during the years of Keir Starmer’s leadership.

His indictment of Sir Keir has three elements:

First, he obtained the Labour leadership by lying, making a host of pledges he has since abandoned, and has maintained his grip through an authoritarianism without precedent in the party’s history.

Second, his offer to the electorate is now virtually indistinguishable from the Tories, reducing the gap between the two parties of government to the point of invisibility, particularly on economic and social policy.

Third, the Labour position on the Gaza crisis represents a moral collapse worse even than its Blair-era support for the Iraq war in that it involves endorsing a genocide occurring before our eyes.

It is a formidable list, posing a huge challenge to any socialist wishing to advocate a Labour vote in the forthcoming general election.

Jones has set up a campaign fund — We Deserve Better — to support independent left and Green Party candidates in that election.

It acknowledges that Labour is nevertheless likely to win by default due to Tory collapse, but that the left needs to offer a genuine alternative.

His proposal does not create a new party or alliance, but seeks to strengthen those forces already in the field.

It joins a number of other initiatives recently taken to challenge Labour at the hustings. The most significant are the “no ceasefire, no vote” movement launched by local councillors who have left Labour and the Workers Party, with a new spring in its step after George Galloway’s victory in Rochdale.

There are also long-established electoral campaigners to consider, including the Communist Party and the Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition.

With a few exceptions, however, the candidates with a chance to make a significant impact will be standing as local left independents.

Obviously, the Green Party will be serious contenders in some seats, the more so since Starmer abandoned his green investment plans. However, the Greens plough their own furrow electorally, sometimes with weak candidates as in Rochdale.

Socialists have therefore created a number of electoral umbrella initiatives — but as yet no umbrella. The only figure who could impose a degree of unity on these efforts is Jeremy Corbyn, who has given no indication that he wants the role.

He has yet to declare his own intentions regarding a possible candidacy in Islington North, having been blocked from continuing as a Labour MP by the Starmerites.

And it must also be acknowledged that many on the Labour left will not be following Jones. Momentum, at its recent conference, recommitted to fighting within Labour for socialist principles.

Momentum’s membership is not what it was but, at 10,000, it is larger, at least on paper, than any left-of-Labour organisation.

So socialist electoral challenges need to leave the door open to continued co-operation with the Labour left, particularly since there is no indication of much trade union support for non-Labour candidates outside certain very specific circumstances (such as Jamie Driscoll’s mayoral re-election bid in north-east England).

Given the likely character of a Starmer government, in the service of the City and imperialism, that unity will be vital.

The immediate hope must be that the political energy unleashed by Corbynism and intensified by the mass movement of solidarity with the Palestinians, can find some unified expression.

Perennial weaknesses of the left — personalities and sectarian squabbling — must not stand in the way.


Comments (15)

  • Jack T says:

    Jones’ resignation cuts no ice. He was one of those who contributed to Jeremy Corbyn’s downfall when he sided with Jeremy Newmark and the JLM with their allegations of antiSemitism against Corbyn.

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  • Vaughan Melzer says:

    I have already left the Labour Party for the same reasons. But I so appreciate your articulate, and brilliantly argued and passionate speech, Owen. Thank you.

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  • Rosie Brocklehurst says:

    Pleased he has done so. I like him.

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  • Terence Barry says:

    And you can add to the list of 3 ‘crimes’ his role in ensuring Labour defeats in the 2017 and 2019 General Elections and all the preventable deaths and human suffering that followed as consequences of Tory governments. To have made that conscious choice is shocking and should prevent him holding any sort of public office.

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  • David Oates says:

    Better late than never, I like Owen as a writer but often seemed slow to stand against the diabolical shift in Labour’s foreign policies. Whether that is him personally or pressure from the papers he wrote for is for him to say. However in this he is absolutely correct. I was a member of 40 years before throwing in the towel when Starmer began suspending Jews opposed to his CofE newly radicalised by Zionism stance.

    Owen here echos my thoughts exactly, not only is there nothing for Socialists to support in Starmers Labour, there is nothing to trust.

    I have long said we need a coalition of Independents, the bravery shown by Cllrs. leaving the parent party and campaigning on what their constituents actually need is astounding – although it shouldn’t be… Now they have the potential of a home and a campaign structure to work under. Rather like the idealism of the Labour Party’s beginnings that Starmer rejects.

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  • Jon K says:

    This link has been posted before in response to JVL platforming Owen Jones. I guess quitting the labour party has given him something else to write about. Has he ever apologised to those he smeared?

    Solidarity with those who have been unjustly ‘terminated’ or who did as Jones did in protest many moons ago – in my case when Long-Bailey was thrown out of shadow cabinet.

    https://labourheartlands.com/ken-loach-and-other-victims-of-owen-jones-guardian-pro-israel-smears/

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  • Doug says:

    Owen Jones
    Vexatious claims of Anti Semitism are hate crimes and should be prosecuted
    As for those who supported the Vexatious claims and lost us two GE’s
    Bigger question
    Will JC do anything of substance

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  • Neil G. says:

    I offer no apologies, but this opportunist chameleon has been prepared to lie and promote Zionist smears in the Guardian, in order to destroy the left in the Labour Party, has supported the same person who offered to “knock out” Jackie Walker and strikes me as performing the same “political” role as Paul Mason. Politically, Jones has to be treated with suspicion and at arms length.

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  • Labour are a dead end says:

    @Jon K – or a sorry to the people of Libya for his cheerleading of natos bombing of it ?

    Will his fellow institutional leftists, like Novara Media, and Jeremy Corbyn follow, or will they just forever remain loyal to the Labour Party no matter what ?

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  • Rory Allen says:

    There are still people of principle and conscience in the Labour Party, which is why I am still in it: as one example, my local MP for York Central, Rachael Maskell. York City council, now Labour controlled, is another example. Let us not fall into the trap of assuming that Starmer *is* the Labour Party.

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  • john clark says:

    Each of us must make a personal decision. After some years of looking at alternatives – and shouting “Wilson Out” on a number of occasions – I decided in the summer of 1967 that only the Labour Party would ever be have a Parliamentary majority that might lead to a fairer society. Very sadly I still hold to that view, despite being as upset by the lack of any radicalism. I had hopes after the 2017 General Election but the forces of capitalism joined with chunks of the Labour Party to lead to our downfall in 2019. There is little point in making public criticism of the Labour Party unless you have a practical radical alternative which can win power through the ballot box (or its online version.) I am open to being convinced otherwise, but it hasn’t happened yet !

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  • Labour are a dead end says:

    @Rory Allen – Starmers the continuity candidate, so people aren’t wrong to assume the party itself is bad. There might be good individuals in the party, but its what it represents overall thats an issue.

    @John Clarke – what can you conclude from Labours anti working class and pro-imperialist stances, both of which existed long before Sir Keir leading it, in terms of creating a “fairer society” which is one of the reasons you cite for being loyal to the party ?

    As for “radical alternatives”, maybe getting unions to disaffiliate from Labour, and then putting money into funding an actual working class party. Groups like the CPGB-ML have some decent takes on the state of things, and although its more of a populist party, the Workers Party of Britain, who JVL are yet to discuss, could be worth getting behind in local elections.

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  • Imbrahim says:

    Just because Jones has left the Labour Party, doesn’t get away from the fact that for the majority of the time, like his professional leftist colleagues, all hes done is go round foaming at the mouth about “TORYS OUT” yet want everyone to put their discontent into voting Labour, who have yet another leader who openly tells you that he admires Thatcher.

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  • Terry says:

    Doug asks “will JC do anything of substance” ?

    Of course, the answer to thats a no. Jeremy will do what hes always done – remain loyal to Labour regardless.

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  • Amanda Sebestyen says:

    I have just heard earlier today that (at least) two members of the Green Party have been accused of antisemitism with potential expulsion looming… Meanwhile being trolled by zionists from outside their own party. Ironically, the crime of one of these Greens was to circulate Owen Jones’ letter resigning from Labour!
    Will the Left never stop shredding itself with accusations of antisemitism even at this desperate moment? BTW Hamza Yusaf was excellent on the Hard Talk interview tonight: about Gaza he was clear, unflappable, truthful, unarguable. Recommended viewing.

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