Jeremy Corbyn confirms plans to form new party

Former Labour leader says he will build ‘real alternative’ to Starmer together with MP Zarah Sultana

Former UK Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn and MP Zarah Sultana's new political party will seek to capitalise on disenchantment with Keir Starmer's government. Photograph: Stefan Rousseau/PA
Former UK Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn and MP Zarah Sultana's new political party will seek to capitalise on disenchantment with Keir Starmer's government. Photograph: Stefan Rousseau/PA

Jeremy Corbyn has confirmed plans to build a new political party as an alternative to Keir Starmer’s Labour, on the first anniversary of the prime minister’s landslide general election victory.

The former Labour leader’s comments came a day after the MP Zarah Sultana announced plans to “co-lead the founding of a new party” with him.

“Our country needs to change direction, now,” Mr Corbyn posted on X.

“The democratic foundations of a new kind of political party will soon take shape,” he added, noting that “discussions are ongoing”.

An ally of Mr Corbyn, who led the Labour party between 2015 and 2020, had previously said he was frustrated that Ms Sultana had made her initial announcement without consulting him first.

“Zarah has really overplayed her hand,” according to the ally, adding that “she jumped the gun to get the data and the donations”.

Labour removed the whip from Mr Corbyn in November 2020 after a damning official report into anti-Semitism in the party while he was leader. He was re-elected as an independent MP at last year’s general election.

Ms Sultana was suspended from the Parliamentary Labour party last year for voting against the government’s welfare policies.

In the post announcing her plans, Ms Sultana said: “Poverty is growing, inequality is obscene and the two-party system offers nothing but managed decline and broken promises.”

Fractures in the new party before it has even launched point to stark challenges for a rival movement on the far left, which is known for infighting and ideological splits.

Despite the apparently botched launch, the threat of a new party underlines the risks to Mr Starmer from those on the left seeking to capitalise on anger and disenchantment with his government.

A recent poll conducted by More in Common found that a new Corbyn-led party would win 10 per cent of the vote, reducing Labour’s share from 23 per cent to 20 per cent and cutting the Green party’s from 9 per cent to 5 per cent. It also found that such a grouping would garner more support than any other party from 18- to 24-year-olds.

Reform UK leader Nigel Farage – who has spoken previously about how splits on the left would benefit his populist right-wing party – appeared to relish the news on Thursday evening.

“If you thought Keir Starmer was having a bad week, it just got a whole lot worse,” he wrote on X.

A Reform spokesperson said the party was “very happy”.

Mr Corbyn had told ITV earlier in the week that a grouping of left-wing MPs would “come together” and that “there will be an alternative” to Labour, which he did not rule out leading. – Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2025

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