General election: Ex-Labour MP Ian Austin urges people to vote Johnson to keep Corbyn out
‘I think Jeremy Corbyn is completely unfit to lead our country, completely unfit to lead the Labour Party’
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Your support makes all the difference.A former Labour MP has urged people to vote Boris Johnson and claimed Jeremy Corbyn is “completely unfit” to run the country as he announced his resignation from parliament in a live interview.
Ian Austin, a prominent critic of the Labour leader, made the remarks just hours after the party’s deputy leader, Tom Watson, announced he was quitting frontline politics at the December election.
Mr Austin, a former minister and adviser to Gordon Brown, also said he would be stepping down from parliament, as he cited antisemitism allegations that he claimed had “poisoned” the party under Mr Corbyn’s leadership.
He told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “I’ve got to be honest with people. I’m not going to run at this election.
“The country faces a big choice. There are only two people who can be prime minister on 13 December: Jeremy Corbyn or Boris Johnson and I think Jeremy Corbyn is completely unfit to lead our country, completely unfit to lead the Labour Party.
“It’s really come to something when I tell decent, traditional, patriotic Labour voters that they should be voting for Boris Johnson at this election. I can’t believe it’s come to this, but that’s where we are.”
Mr Austin, the MP for Dudley since 2005, resigned from the Labour Party in February, hitting out at Mr Corbyn for “creating a culture of extremism and intolerance”.
Speaking on Thursday – the second day of the official election campaign – Mr Austin added: “Look, the public has to make this choice. The British people have to decide this. Lots of traditional Labour voters are going to be grappling with this question.
“If they’ve got to face up to that, then I don’t think people like me should have the luxury of running away from it. What Jeremy Corbyn has done to the Labour Party, I don’t want him to be able to do that to the country.”
Responding to Mr Austin's remarks, the shadow business secretary Rebecca Long-Bailey said: "I am very sad. Ian did great work as an MP, of course he's been an independent now for some time, and I don't think it's any secret that he has differed on decisions of policy and he doesn't like Jeremy – I think that's pretty clear.
"But certainly voting for Boris Johnson if you're a Labour voter and want to protect your community that's absolutely absurd and it makes no sense at all."
"I hope when Jeremy is prime minister, Ian will change his mind and will start to campaign within the Labour Party," she added.
Mr Austin's remarks also came after the Labour veteran and deputy leader Mr Watson said he was giving up frontline politics after almost four decades to campaign on public health matters, staying on in his role until 12 December election.
Mr Watson said he was standing down for “personal, not political” reasons, and made no mention of the botched attempt the left to abolish his post on the eve of Labour’s conference in September.
“If he felt that the pendulum was about to swing back very rapidly the other way, then he might have hung on,” said one Labour MP. “Perhaps he thought the road ahead was a long, not a short one.”
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