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Labour begins voting to elect new leader with veteran socialist Jeremy Corbyn setting the pace

Many top Labour figures warn the party under him could not take power in a country where elections are typically won or lost on the centre ground.

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Labour Party front runner Jeremy Corbyn. Photo: Reuters

Voting began on Friday to elect the new leader of Britain’s main opposition Labour party, with Jeremy Corbyn, a veteran socialist who would move the party significantly to the left, favourite to win.

The 66-year-old only entered the race as a wildcard but has attracted surging grassroots support, prompting backers to adopt the slogan “Jez We Can” in an echo of Barack Obama’s 2008 presidential campaign rallying call.

But Corbyn’s policies are closer to Greece’s hard-left Syriza than Obama. Many top Labour figures warn the party under him could not take power in a country where elections are typically won or lost on the centre ground.

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“The party is walking eyes shut, arms outstretched, over the cliff’s edge to the jagged rocks below,” Tony Blair, Labour’s prime minister between 1997 and 2007, wrote in Thursday’s Guardian newspaper.

“It is a moment for a rugby tackle if that were possible.”

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The results of the election will be announced on September 12, with over 600,000 members and supporters of Labour eligible to vote either by mail or online.

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