Posts Tagged ‘Long Corbyn’

When Kafka and Long Corbynism collide

11/04/2026, 10:31:24 PM

by James Mendelsohn

Following the official ban on him standing for Labour at the next General Election, Jeremy Corbyn’s direct influence on British politics may be at an end. However, he will leave an enduring impact on our national political discourse. His embittered followers will remain vocal. And, in my case, one of them is pursuing me through the courts.

In a Kafkaesque universe, I am being sued by a Corbyn supporter over nine tweets which I didn’t post. I am one of three defendants in a case against myself, Edward Cantor and the late Dr Pete Newbon. I am being sued for libel, invasion of privacy, and breach of data protection law – even though I didn’t post a single tweet. As if that were not mad enough, I am also being sued for harassment. I sometimes feel as if I am an actor in a film about someone else.

This started when Pete Newbon campaigned against antisemitism in the UK Labour Party and got into a typical Twitter spat with an account called @per_incuriam – a legal term which, ironically, means a legal decision made in ignorance of legal authority. This was the Twitter handle for a non-practising solicitor, law lecturer and Corbyn supporter named James Wilson. Wilson and I were once colleagues in a university law department, and it is fair to say that we did not get on.

When Pete Newbon indicated that he was at loggerheads with someone, I sent him a private message making him aware that, if his opponent was James Wilson, this was a person who got into unpleasant arguments. This was shown by a Facebook post written by a mother with whom Wilson had quarrelled about parking near a school. I thought nothing more of it, but, a few weeks later, Pete Newbon used a screenshot of that post in a Twitter thread which Wilson saw.

Wilson went apoplectic, threatening to sue me and Pete. Edward Cantor tweeted one further copy of the Facebook post. Edward’s tweet was not retweeted and was ‘liked’ only once. I never tweeted at all – but Wilson says I am responsible for Pete Newbon’s actions. Pete’s tweets themselves had very few republications, and were all deleted within 24 hours.

Wilson said that the Facebook post was a factual statement which meant that he was a paedophile. In a preliminary trial last year, a High Court judge said otherwise and rejected Wilson’s argument. The judge ruled that the words used were an expression of an opinion that Wilson is a weirdo who harasses people. Still Wilson carried on, and now we face a full trial.

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Labour needs to battle through Long Corbyn to overcome Long Thatcherism

06/02/2023, 10:44:58 PM

by Jonathan Todd

The most common symptoms of Long Covid, according to the NHS website, include extreme tiredness, loss of smell, and muscle aches. It is Zoonotic: transmitting between species and from animals to humans. It also moves from the medical to the political.

“In 82 opinion polls since January,” lamented Denis MacShane on The Article in October 2020, “the Labour Party has only been ahead in one of them”. Despite Keir Starmer outperforming the then prime minister, Boris Johnson, “in terms of competence and coherence.”

“The party,” diagnosed MacShane, “is suffering with symptoms of “Long Corbyn” … The virus of hard leftist unelectability is not easy to eradicate.”

Liverpool had not won the league in 25 years when Jürgen Klopp was appointed manager in 2015. Past glories felt unlikely to be recaptured. Klopp urged doubters to be believers. His Liverpool became the first British team to hold the European Cup, European Super Cup, Club World Cup, and league titles simultaneously.

Three months after MacShane’s article, I paraphrased Klopp to argue that Labour doubters should become believers. The symptoms of Long Corbyn were at their height: extreme tiredness (years of Labour doorstep with little to show for it), misplaced sense of political smell (failing to sniff the weaknesses that clung to Johnson even at the height of his powers), our muscles ached from the strife and disappointment under Corbyn.

This context made eccentric my prediction of Labour victory. Things have dramatically turned.

All who doubted Labour now believe. Once tired activists, bouncing back from Long Corbyn, stride purposefully towards power. The whiff of Labour government permeates all corners of national life. My reasons for optimism have come to pass – and then some.

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