And above all, there’s the prophetic political analysis showcased in the fissiparous attempts to found the Peoples’ Front of Judea – or should that be The Judean Peoples’ Front?
This week, the ambitious and energetic 31-year-old Sultana accused her 76-year-old partner of belonging to “a sexist boys club”. Corbyn responded by threatening legal action against her for what he called her “unauthorised email”, setting up a “supposed membership portal” with a £55 membership fee.
“They have refused to allow any other women with voting rights on the working group,” Sultana complained, “blocking the gender-balanced committee that both Jeremy and I signed up to.”
Hence what is turning into an existential struggle between Corbyn and Sultana. She sees herself as the future and him as the past, but knows she needs his afterglow if the new party is to establish itself on the left against the Greens and the nationalist parties.
When Sultana launched the idea of a new party back in July, 700,000 people expressed an interest online – whatever their motive. She claimed 20,000 people signed up to the portal on Friday before it was suspended. That would have raised a potential £1m; £55 a year, however, is much more than the laughable £3 Labour subscription once exploited by pro-Corbyn entryists.
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He is de-emphasing the environmental elements of his party’s offer but still has a free rein on what socialist style policies he espouses. Meanwhile, the various elements of the would-be standard bearers of the left are locked in conflict on the finer points of their as yet unwritten manifesto.
Over the years his devotion to radical causes has made him “friends” with Sinn Féin, “friends” in Hamas, and the Stop the War Coalition. He prefers to debate the finer points of doctrine with ideologically aligned brothers and sisters, rather than attempt to broaden his appeal. He refused to confront antisemitism in the Labour Party and took a feebly low profile during the Brexit referendum. For the Sultana camp, Corbyn is not radical enough.
Even under united leadership and with an agreed name, the party would still face an uphill struggle. Last month an Ipsos poll found only 20 per cent of respondents said they would be likely to vote for them, significantly behind Reform UK (38 per cent), Labour (33 per cent), the Liberal Democrats (29 per cent) and the Conservatives (28 per cent).
And if the Corbyn and Sultana factions continue to argue amongst themselves, voters are likely to borrow a punchline from another Monty Python sketch: “If you’re going to split hairs, I’m going to piss off.”
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