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Jeremy Corbyn suggests he will challenge new Labour leadership rules in court

 'I’m very concerned. We haven’t heard the end of this. A lot of people joined the party in the last six months and will be extremely annoyed'

Siobhan Fenton
Sunday 17 July 2016 07:15 EDT
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(Getty)

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Jeremy Corbyn has suggested he may take legal action to challenge voting rules for the upcoming Labour leadership election.

Currently, members who joined after 12 January will not be able to vote unless they pay a fee of £25. As many people recently joined the party as £3 supporters to back Mr Corbyn, some of his supporters have raised concerns this could unfairly skew the vote against him.

In an interview with the Sunday Mirror, the Labour leader said: “I’m very concerned. We haven’t heard the end of this. A lot of people joined the party in the past six months and will be extremely annoyed.

Labour's voting rule change

“They joined because they want to be involved in the party and they’re not being allowed to.There may be a legal move, but nothing has been decided yet. Not by me anyway.”

Angela Eagle and Owen Smith are both launching rival bids to replace Mr Corbyn as Labour leader. The formal period for party MPs to declare support for candidates begins tomorrow.

In a further blow for his leadership, a ComRes poll for The Independent released today found that one in three Labour voters say they would rather see Theresa May be Prime Minister than Mr Corbyn.

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