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Tom Watson: toppled by left wing twitter ...

Tom Watson: toppled by left wing twitter?

Dec 26, 2020

Tom Watson stood down as Labour deputy leader on 12th December 2019. This is the story about my modest part in his downfall. First published 16th August 2020.

Tom Watson: toppled by left wing twitter?

This is a story about the downfall of Tom Watson. I will begin by providing the background to the story and then reveal the small part I played in his downfall.

The day after Labour’s 2015 general election defeat Tom Watson put himself forward to be the new deputy leader of the party. He was the first candidate to declare. Watson was very quick out of the gate.

In his prospectus he promised to support the leader “100%.” On that basis I voted for him. I was cheated, Watson had run on a false prospectus. He spent the next four and a half years undermining and sabotaging Jeremy Corbyn at every twist and every turn. At the height of the 2016 coup he openly called for the resignation of the party leader.

The 2016 coup against the Labour leader

Labour members watched on in disbelief as right-wing MPs, coordinated by Tom Watson, openly sabotaged Labour's electability. They refused to accept the election of Jeremy Corbyn as leader and coordinated a series of resignations to try to topple the leader of Her Majesty’s Opposition. By doing so they not only committed an act of betrayal against the Party but also an act of treachery against the Crown. 

When that unconstitutional attempt to usurp the Labour leader failed they tried another, calling for a vote of no confidence in Corbyn. Despite Corbyn being elected leader just nine months before with an overwhelming mandate of 59.9% of the vote, 172 MPs refused to respect his mandate and authority as leader. Specific details of the plotting that took place during this period between MPs and senior staff members were recently revealed in the leaked Labour Report. Watson is named in that report as being the person who would have become the interim leader if Corbyn was toppled.

When the Blairites/Labour right wing launched their coup against Corbyn in 2016, ten thousand people, including me, gathered in Parliament Square to show our support for Jeremy. Corbyn was then challenged for the leadership by Angela Eagle (the brick that never was), whose campaign rapidly fizzled out and who was in turn replaced by yet another paper candidate, Owen Smith. Corbyn won a landslide victory against Smith, winning 61.8% of the vote

The fact that the plotters, including Keir Starmer, backed Owen Smith, a former lobbyist for Big Pharma, tells you everything you need to know about the values, principles and priorities of the Labour right wing and the current party leader.

Corbyn's 2017 comeback

Despite being constantly undermined by the right wing of the party, in 2017 Corbyn delivered a manifesto full of popular and costed policies and led an excellent campaign. However, the sabotage of the party by Watson’s faction had badly damaged Labour’s polling. Before the June 2016 coup Labour polled at 34% (Ipsos-MORI), neck and neck with the Tories. The persistent acts of sabotage by Watson and his fellow plotters achieved their desired effect, by April 2017 Labour’s polling had collapsed to 23% (YouGov). 

Corbyn defied his critics by pulling back a record 17pt deficit during the campaign, winning Labour 12.9 million votes (40%). Corbyn achieved the highest vote share increase since 1945 (+9.6%), winning 3.6m more votes than Ed Miliband had won just two years before. If you average Corbyn and Blair’s last two general election results, Corbyn wins. He won Labour 2,870,122 more votes in 2017 and 2019 than Blair won in 2001 and 2005. It is a further inconvenient fact for those who questioned Corbyn’s electability that that he won a higher percentage of voters in England than Tony Blair.

The continuation of the coup

One would have hoped that, even at this late stage, Watson, Starmer, Blair and the others would have accepted Corbyn’s authority and worked with him to get Labour into power. They did the exact opposite, redoubling their efforts to topple him. The Blairites finally fell upon the people’s vote campaign and used it as a weapon to drive a wedge between Corbyn and members. Blair, Mandelson, Watson and Starmer forced Labour to adopt a second referendum policy which defied the wishes of the 65% of constituencies which voted to leave the EU. 

As the UK is a majoritarian parliamentary democracy it was always obvious that defying a two thirds constituency supermajority in favour of leaving the EU would guarantee defeat for Labour at a subsequent general election. Peter Mandelson said he did something every day to undermine Jeremy Corbyn. Mandelson was one of the people leading the people’s vote campaign. That is what he was doing every day to undermine Corbyn.

So, what part did I play in the downfall of Tom Watson? 

On August 4th 2018 Tom Watson was, yet again, vigorously briefing against Labour and attacking the party leader. I decided to take action. With a little help from my friends I organised the #ResignWatson twitterstorm. From concept to launch in 17 hours, the storm invited people to tweet why they wanted Tom Watson to resign.

The hashtag trended number one worldwide soon after launching on 5th August. 12,195 unique twitter accounts sent 30,000 tweets in the first hour, the overwhelming majority of them expressing deep dissatisfaction with Watson. The general consensus was that he constantly undermined the leader and should be replaced with a deputy who would support Corbyn and enhance Labour’s unity and electability.

The very next day, on August 6th, Tom Watson created headline news by engaging in a flurry of media activity responding to the twitterstorm's demand for him to stand down.

To maintain the social media pressure I followed up the #ResignWatson storm with another storm in June 2019. #SackTomWatson was a response to Watson stating Labour was a remain party when that was not Labour policy. The hashtag trended at number 2 in the UK. People who took part commented on Watson’s behaviour, describing him as “ill-disciplined” “destructive” and “divisive”. Others predicted that defying the 65% of constituencies which voted leave would inevitably drive those voters into the arms of the Tories at the next election. Unfortunately, that prediction proved to be true. 

The final chapter

On 6th November 2019 Tom Watson announced he was going to resign as Labour deputy leader and would leave office on 12th December. I am not suggesting the twitterstorms caused Watson’s resignation but I do think it is safe to say that the public demands for his resignation did not help him in any way. It is even possible that the widely supported demands for his resignation could have accelerated his departure from politics. 

The objective of the campaign was to force the resignation of Tom Watson. Tom Watson resigned, the campaign’s objective was achieved. 

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