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First cabinet minister enters race to become deputy Labour leader – UK politics live | Politics

Bridget Phillipson becomes first minister to enter race to become deputy Labour leader

Good morning. Yesterday around a dozen Labour MPs were being named as potential candidates for the deputy leadership, but it is mathematically impossible for more than four of them to get the required number of nominations and quite possible that only two or three will manage it. And, with hustings scheduled for tomorrow, any serious candidates are going to have to declare today.

This morning Bridget Phillipson has announced that she is standing. As a woman, who is not from London (she is MP for Houghton and Sunderland South) and a loyalist (she is education secretary), she has all the qualities mentioned by Harriet Harman yesterday as ideal for the next deputy leader.

Here is the statement Phillipson has issued:

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.

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.

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.

The only other candidate to have formally declared so far is Bell Ribeiro-Addy, a leftwinger, who may struggle to get the 80 MPs nominations needed.

As a cabinet minister, Phillipson will be seen (fairly or not) as the leadership candidate. In the current climate, that is probably not an advantage in an election open to all Labour party members, but a lot will depend on who is on the final ballot. It is hard to imagine that Phillipson won’t get the 80 names. There is less clarity about who else might be there.

Phillipson has got an ideal platform today; she is speaking at the TUC conference in Brighton.

Here is the agenda for the day.

Morning: Keir Starmer chairs cabinet.

10am: Tim Davie, director general of the BBC, gives evidence to the Commons culture committee.

11am: Kemi Badenoch gives a speech on welfare.

11.30am: Rachel Reeves, the chancellor, takes questions in the Commons.

Noon: Downing Street holds a lobby briefing.

After 12.30pm: MPs debate the Diego Garcia military base and British Indian Ocean Territory bill, that implements the treaty transferring sovereignty of the Chagos Islands to Mauritius.

Afternoon: Phillipson speaks at the TUC conference in Brighton.

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Key events

Emily Thornberry says she is standing for deputy Labour leader, with Gaza and support for wealth tax key part of her campaign

Emily Thornberry, the chair of the Commons foreign affairs committee, has confirmed that she is standing to be Labour’s deputy leader.

In a statement on social media, she says:

I’m running for Deputy Leader of the Labour Party.

We fought hard for a Labour government. But we’ve made mistakes and must listen.

Welfare. Gaza. Wealth tax. Changes to come on SEND.

I will be a voice for the membership, unions, PLP, and our constituents – not just nod along.

Thornberry was in Keir Starmer’s shadow cabinet, as shadow attorney general, but was surprised after the election not to get a government job. Starmer chose Lord Hermer KC, an old friend and legal colleague, for attorney general instead.

Thornberry’s announcement means there are now three confirmed candidates, representing three strands of party opinion. They are:

Loyalist/pro-government: Bridget Phillipson

Soft left: Emily Thornberry

Left: Bell Ribeiro-Addy

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