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Bridget Phillipson enters race to become Labour deputy leader Bridget Phillipson enters race to become Labour deputy leader
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Education secretary says she aims to ‘unite our great party and deliver for working people’Education secretary says she aims to ‘unite our great party and deliver for working people’
Who is in the running for deputy leader?Who is in the running for deputy leader?
Bridget Phillipson has become the first cabinet minister to join the race to become Labour’s deputy leader. Bridget Phillipson, the education secretary, has thrown her hat in the ring for the Labour deputy leadership contest, immediately becoming the favourite to win as she is most likely to meet the threshold of MP nominations.
In a statement on Tuesday, the education secretary said: “Today I am putting myself forward as a candidate for the deputy leadership of the Labour party, to unite our great party and deliver for working people. While Labour party members, many of whom are to the left of Keir Starmer’s leadership, could be suspicious of her role as a serving cabinet minister, she will be seen by backbenchers as Downing Street’s de facto candidate.
“I am a proud working-class woman from the north-east. I have come from a single-parent family on a tough council street, all the way to the cabinet, determined to deliver better life chances for young people growing up in our country. Allies of Phillipson also believe she has “a good story to tell” from her time running the department for education expanding free school meal provision and childcare support for new parents, as well as fighting to do more to tackle child poverty.
As a working-class Northerner who made it to the top of government, she meets the requirement of many MPs to have a woman from outside London leading the party alongside Starmer, while she has a reputation as an effective local campaigner unafraid to take on Reform UK.
However, while party insiders suggested that Phillipson may be prepared to acknowledge the government had made mistakes on issues including welfare and Gaza, as a serving cabinet minister “she won’t come out swinging” against Starmer, they said.
With a series of senior female Labour MPs dropping out of contention to replace Angela Rayner – including Shabana Mahmood, Lisa Nandy and Louise Haigh – a compressed timetable for nominations and worries about a potentially toxic atmosphere have narrowed the field.
Emily Thornberry, the chair of the powerful foreign affairs committee, and Lucy Powell, the ousted Commons leader, are both understood to be considering running on a soft left ticket, pledging to hold Starmer to account on behalf of Labour members.
However, in a fast-moving process where hopefuls have until Thursday afternoon to secure nominations from at least 80 Labour MPs, they could struggle to reach the ballot if the field ends up wide, dividing the MP vote.
Other MPs considering standing are Alison McGovern, a local government minister, and Anneliese Dodds, the former aid minister and previously party chair.
Bell Ribeiro-Addy, a south London MP who is close to Diane Abbott, has emerged as the candidate of the left of the party. She told the BBC on Tuesday that Labour needs a discussion on “what’s gone wrong” since it came to office.
“We do have to accept that we have to have a discussion about what members don’t like and what voters don’t like, and what’s gone wrong,” she said.
“It’s very important to note that a load of Labour members and voters are unhappy about the handling of the situation in Gaza, the winter fuel allowance, the welfare cuts.
“All of these things are things that we should be discussing and the idea that we should not have a debate because it may seem critical of the party, I think, is wrong.”
Ribeiro-Addy also suggested the truncated timetable set out for Labour’s deputy leadership is “unfair”, giving MPs just three days to decide who they will put forward for a vote among the party membership.
In a statement announcing her candidacy, Phillipson said: “I am a proud working-class woman from the north-east. I have come from a single parent family on a tough council street, all the way to the cabinet, determined to deliver better life chances for young people growing up in our country.
“I’ve taken on powerful vested interests in the education sector – and even as they threw everything at me, I have never taken a backwards step. I will bring that same determination to every battle ahead of us.“I’ve taken on powerful vested interests in the education sector – and even as they threw everything at me, I have never taken a backwards step. I will bring that same determination to every battle ahead of us.
“Because make no mistake, we are in a fight. We all know the dangers Reform poses our country. But not only am I ready for it, I’ve proven we can do it. I’ve shown we can beat Farage in the north-east, while staying true to the Labour party’s values of equality, fairness and social justice. “Because make no mistake: we are in a fight. We all know the dangers Reform poses our country. But not only am I ready for it, I’ve proven we can do it. I’ve shown we can beat Farage in the north-east, while staying true to the Labour party’s values of equality, fairness and social justice.”
“With me as deputy leader we will beat them right across the country and unite to deliver the opportunity that working people across this great country deserve.”
Phillipson is the second MP to put themselves forward for the deputy leadership, left vacant after Angela Rayner’s resignation last week over her tax affairs.
Bell Ribeiro-Addy announced her candidacy on Monday evening, while the foreign affairs committee chair, Emily Thornberry, has indicated she is also considering a bid for the role.
Speaking to the BBC’s Today programme on Tuesday, Ribeiro-Addy said Labour needed a debate about “what’s gone wrong” in its first year in power and warned the party would not be able to “attract or even to retain” voters without a change in direction.
Nominations for the deputy leadership opened on Tuesday and candidates have until 5pm on Thursday to secure the backing of 80 MPs in order to reach the next round of the contest.
The truncated nomination period has led some to accuse the party leadership of orchestrating a “stitch-up”, with Ribeiro-Addy describing it as “unfair”.