I like Lisa Nandy. Despite David Goodhart’s recent critique that she does not go far enough, there is little doubt that she is more interested in things we care about at UnHerd than the other candidates — left behind towns, understanding rather than demonising voters who turned to Brexit and the Tories and the importance of community.
But I didn’t think she was in with a chance of winning the Labour leadership. Keir Starmer seems straight out of central casting for prime minister, and Long-Bailey has the all-important support of the Left.
But two things overnight made me think again. Perhaps she is in with a chance after all?
First, Paul Waugh’s excellent briefing last night walked us through her second preference strategy, and how she is the only candidate who could technically pull off a surprise win:
If (and it’s a big ‘if’ at present) she can somehow force her way into second place, Nandy’s allies are confident they can beat Starmer with a mass transfer of Long-Bailey supporters’ second preferences. A snapshot of social media (and it still plays a part in internal Labour elections) shows lots of members already saying Nandy will get their second preference.
Nick Watt then followed up on Newsnight last night with more information: apparently the backing of Unite the Union, formerly thought of as a slam dunk for Rebecca Long-Bailey, is “not a done deal.” Apparently Len McLuskey (who has been reliably Eurosceptic throughout the Corbyn years) has a soft spot for Lisa Nandy. “Len McLuskey likes and admires Lisa Nandy and wants her to be given a good chance in front of his executive. He met with Lisa Nandy and Rebecca Long-Bailey in separate meetings. Lisa Nandy is said to have done well in that meeting’ Rebecca Long-Bailey not so well.”
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