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Corbyn launches bid to remain UK Labour leader

Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn launched his bid on Thursday to remain head of Britain's biggest opposition party despite bitter divisions that have been deepened by the Brexit referendum.
Jeremy Corbyn, leader of the opposition British Labour Party speaks at a press conference in London on July 21, 2016 to launch his leadership campaign after a challenge from Owen Smith. Former BBC producer Owen Smith will be the sole challenger against veteran socialist Jeremy Corbyn to lead Britain's opposition Labour Party after registrations for the race closed on Wednesday. / AFP PHOTO / NIKLAS HALLE'N

Jeremy Corbyn, leader of the opposition British Labour Party speaks at a press conference in London on July 21, 2016 to launch his leadership campaign after a challenge from Owen Smith.<br />Former BBC producer Owen Smith will be the sole challenger against veteran socialist Jeremy Corbyn to lead Britain’s opposition Labour Party after registrations for the race closed on Wednesday. / AFP PHOTO / NIKLAS HALLE’N

Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn launched his bid on Thursday to remain head of Britain’s biggest opposition party despite bitter divisions that have been deepened by the Brexit referendum.

The veteran socialist has clung on even though three-quarters of the party’s lawmakers say they have lost confidence in his leadership and Welsh MP Owen Smith has launched a challenge to oust him.

“It’s the job, it’s the duty, it’s the responsibility of every Labour MP to get behind the party,” Corbyn said at the start of his leadership campaign.

“I hold out the hand of friendship,” he said, addressing “those who may not agree with me politically, may not even like me personally”.

Labour Party members and supporters will vote on Corbyn and Smith by postal ballot over the summer and the result will be announced on September 24.

Some commentators have warned the outcome could split the historic Labour Party, which grew out of Britain’s trade union movement in the 19th century.

The 67-year-old Corbyn is automatically on the ballot as the current leader and he has strong grassroots support but Smith is backed by 162 of the party’s 230 MPs including former leader Ed Miliband.

Some 180,000 Labour supporters have signed up to vote in recent days.

“We, the Labour party, will be stronger, even stronger, and hopefully even bigger at the end of this campaign,” Corbyn said.

Smith is barely known outside of Westminster and Wales but moderates in the Labour party are hoping he will dethrone Corbyn, who has been heavily criticised for lukewarm campaigning for Britain to stay in the European Union ahead of last month’s referendum.

Corbyn critics — many of them supporters of the more centrist policies of former leader Tony Blair — accuse Corbyn of pursuing a leftist agenda that could keep the party out of power for years.

The 46-year-old Smith, who previous worked as a BBC producer and a lobbyist for pharmaceuticals giant Pfizer, has paid tribute to Corbyn for “helping Labour discover its radical roots” but said the party needed a new generation to take it forward.

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