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Labour presses on with 'one member, one vote' leadership reforms | Labour presses on with 'one member, one vote' leadership reforms |
(35 minutes later) | |
Plans to reform Labour leadership elections are expected to go before the party's national executive committee this weekend, the BBC has learned. | |
The party is thought to be planning to adopt the one member, one vote system. | |
Trade unions, which account for one third of the votes under current rules, have protested about the plans. | |
Leader Ed Miliband first proposed a "historic" change in his party's relationship with the unions after the Falkirk candidate selection scandal. | |
Under the proposals, each of the roughly 200,000 Labour members will get a single vote in choosing the leader, but so will a new class of so-called associate members, who will pay a membership fee of £3 a year. | |
MPs and MEPs, who collectively also have a third of the votes in leadership elections at present, will be relegated to a role in short-listing candidates. | MPs and MEPs, who collectively also have a third of the votes in leadership elections at present, will be relegated to a role in short-listing candidates. |
Newsnight's Emily Maitlis said that some senior Labour party figures were worried that a move aimed at diminishing the unions' influence could end up handing them even more power. | |
Some fear that the union leaders will use their powers to register large numbers of associate members and influence their decisions, despite the loss of their block votes, she added. | Some fear that the union leaders will use their powers to register large numbers of associate members and influence their decisions, despite the loss of their block votes, she added. |
The plans are expected to be introduced incrementally over a five-year period. | The plans are expected to be introduced incrementally over a five-year period. |
Last summer, the Labour leader said: "In the 21st Century it doesn't make any sense for anyone to be affiliated to a political party unless they have chosen to do so." | |
Changing its link with the unions would mean an end to "machine politics", he argued. | |
The announcement came after Unite, one of the party's biggest donors, was accused of signing up its members to Labour in Falkirk - some without their knowledge - in an effort to get its preferred parliamentary candidate selected. | |
The union was later cleared in an internal investigation. |