The Future Britain Group was a group of over 150 Labour parliamentarians (around 70 peers and 80 MPs) set up in March 2019 by then-Deputy Leader of the Labour Party, Tom Watson, comprising those on the centre, centre-left and soft left of the party.[2][3][4][5] The first meeting of the grouping is believed to have been attended by almost a third of Labour MPs.[4] Its convener was MP Darren Jones.[5]
Future Britain Group | |
---|---|
Founder | Tom Watson |
Convener | Darren Jones |
Founded | 8 March 2019[1] |
Ideology | Third Way Social democracy Pro-Europeanism |
Political position | Centre to centre-left |
National affiliation | Labour Party |
Colours | Red |
History and ideology
editThe group was set up following defections from the Labour and Conservative parties to form the centrist, pro-European parliamentary grouping the Independent Group (TIG).[5] Watson set up Future Britain to prevent further defections from the party.[4]
Notable individuals in the group included former Labour leader Lord Neil Kinnock and John Prescott as well as leading Blairites and Brownites, including Lord Peter Mandelson, Lord Andrew Adonis, MP Yvette Cooper,[5] Lord David Blunkett, MP Pat McFadden, Lord Stewart Wood,[2] Hilary Benn and Lord Peter Hain.[3]
Since the resignation of a few Labour MPs to form TIG, and 18 February 2019 registration, Future Britain's parked-website (www.futurebritaingroup.co.uk/) just said 'Coming Soon'. It was registered 19 days before Watson publicly named the group.[6] Additionally, in what was seen as an attack on Jeremy Corbyn and the left wing of the party, Watson argued that Labour's front bench should be reshuffled to accommodate "social democratic and democratic socialist traditions" of the Labour Party.[6]
The group sought a broad church/big tent approach to the party. Mandelson described the group as a "coming together of the TB-GBs", a reference to the long standing divisions between those loyal to former Labour leaders Tony Blair and Gordon Brown in the New Labour era.[5] Kinnock said the group was set up to promote "democratic socialist values" and "achievable, possible and affordable policies".[5] Over 150 Labour MPs and Lords attended the group's launch, including 14 members of the Shadow Cabinet and 13 former cabinet members.[2]
Although Jones as convener denied allegations of factionalism, or that it was "a Labour equivalent of the Tory European Research Group",[2] the group had been called a "new faction" of deputy leader Tom Watson.[6] The Times noted that there were "fears in the Labour high command that Mr Watson is in effect establishing a party within a party".[4] However, Jones denied these claims.[2]
The group was short-lived and had been dissolved by September 2021.[7]
References
edit- ^ Stewart, Heather (8 March 2019). "Tom Watson sets up centre-left group within Labour party". The Guardian. Retrieved 22 February 2020.
- ^ a b c d e Watts 2019.
- ^ a b The Week 2019.
- ^ a b c d Zeffman 2019.
- ^ a b c d e f Mason 2019.
- ^ a b c Steerpike 2019.
- ^ Webb & Bale 2021.
Sources
edit- Mason, Chris (11 March 2019). "Future Britain Group draws Labour MPs". BBC News. Retrieved 14 March 2019.
- Steerpike (11 March 2019). "The mystery of Tom Watson and the 'Future Britain Group' website". Coffee House. The Spectator. Retrieved 14 March 2019.
- Watts, Joe (11 March 2019). "More than 150 Labour figures join new group following resignations over Corbyn's leadership". The Independent.
- The Week (12 March 2019). "What is the Future Britain Group and will it make any difference?". The Week UK. Retrieved 14 March 2019.
- Zeffman, Henry (12 March 2019). "Tom Watson's rebel group draws a third of Labour MPs". The Times. Retrieved 14 March 2019.
- Webb, Paul; Bale, Tim (September 2021). "Conflict and cohesion within parties". The Modern British Party System: 205–236 – via Oxford Academic.
External links
edit- Future Britain Group Archived 2019-09-23 at the Wayback Machine