The prospect of left-wing frontrunner Jeremy Corbyn becoming Labour Party leader is shaking up Britain’s political establishment.
flickr/Garry Knight
The emergence of ageing left-winger Jeremy Corbyn as the unlikely frontrunner in the Labour Party leadership contest signals that many British voters reject what politics has become.
Alan Newman
Best of times, worst of times: How leadership elections and an EU referendum are conspiring to leave party donations on the backburner just when it seems most possible to make a difference.
The elder statesman makes a comeback.
Dominic Lipinski/PA Wire
For the last 30 years, politics has been dominated by a succession of bright young things. Could Corbyn change that?
True British Metal/Flickr
Two parties. Two rivals. Two plans. One surprisingly similar outcome.
Jeremy Corbyn is shaping the debate.
Peter Byrne / PA Wire/Press Association Images
If anyone other than Jeremy Corbyn is to become the next Labour leader, they will have to address the party’s fatalism about 2020.
On the threshold of a new era?
Stefan Rousseau / PA Wire/PA Images
If you ignore the spoiling campaign being run by the press, the left-winger’s campaign platform begins to appear eminently sensible.
Is Corbyn too left?
Jasn
Jeremy Corbyn has been accused of being unelectable as a Labour leader. Could this be true?
Man of the moment.
PA/Stefan Rousseau
All four leadership hopefuls have a political position — but only one is actually saying what it is.
But wait – he’s got a beard!
Lynne Cameron / PA Wire/Press Association Images
It’s increasingly apparent that the Labour Party is muddling through a period of existential crisis. This week’s welfare bill debacle, where 48 MPs wilfully defied the interim leadership’s call for abstention…
How to muscle in on the centre spot.
EPA/Facundo Arrizabalaga
Studies from the world of business give some insights into how potential leaders can navigate out of the shadows and into the spotlight.
Burnham and Cooper are in the final four.
PA/Laura Lean
The nominations are in and a long contest lies ahead.
That halo’s wearing a bit thin, David.
PA/Chris Ison
Why do people continue to think the former Foreign Secretary would have made a better leader than his brother, Ed?
Nationalism: it’s a more complex picture than you think.
Travel Junction
Conservative political parties did not conjure up English nationalism, they capitalised on a growing trend.
The electoral phenomenon that left David Cameron smiling will have huge implications for future battles.
Ki Price/EPA
‘Shy Tories’ doesn’t cut it. There is another anomaly in the election poll data which offers a more useful angle on what went wrong.
Umunna has said the media scrutiny was too much.
Facundo Arrizabalaga/EPA
Chuka Umunna was not the person for the job, but neither is anyone else in contention.
Labour shouldn’t lurch back to the Blairite camp.
EPA/Richard Lewis
The centrist strategy that worked for New Labour won’t work for the party going forward.
Blairites are waiting in the wings.
Facundo Arrizabalaga/EPA
Ed Miliband’s many Blairite critics have formed an orderly queue to tell us why he lost.
And the contenders for Labour leader are…
PA/PA Wire
Three parties must now choose new leaders. Labour has a number of candidates jockeying for position.
Business secretary Vince Cable lost his seat in Twickenham.
Jonathan Brady/PA Wire
Such an unexpected general election result was bound to throw up more than its share of ‘Portillo moments’.
Five more years: David Cameron returns to Number 10 Downing Street.
EPA/Andy Rain
A stunning surprise put the Conservatives back in power with no need for a coalition, while the Scottish nationalists stormed to victory north of the border. What now?