Breakfast Club (British politics) explained

The Breakfast Club referred to an informal group of four Labour Party politicians, set up following the party's defeat in the 2015 General Election, amid leadership speculation.

The four members[1] [2] [3] gained their seats at the 2010 General Election, and were seen to be from the 'Blairite' third way wing of the party:

All members endorsed Liz Kendall's bid for leadership of the party,[4] although Kendall's commitment to the group had been disputed, with reported absences from group meetings and one MP reportedly saying “I don’t think Liz eats breakfast.”[5]

The term was in reference to early morning meetings in Portcullis House, reportedly "to plot the future."[6]

See also

Notes and References

  1. News: MP Liz Kendall dismisses as "complete nonsense" talk of her being a possible new leader of the Labour Party. Troughton. Adrian. January 26, 2015. 5 June 2015. Leicester Mercury. https://web.archive.org/web/20150629120112/http://www.leicestermercury.co.uk/MP-Liz-Kendall-dismisses-complete-nonsense-talk/story-25924529-detail/story.html. June 29, 2015. dead.
  2. News: Chuka Umunna endorses Liz Kendall for Labour leader. Hardman. Isabel. 26 May 2015. 5 June 2015. The Spectator.
  3. News: Liz Kendall: full story of the outsider who became the Labour leadership candidate with the 'mo'. Prince. Rosa. 27 May 2015. 5 June 2015. The Telegraph.
  4. Web site: Who's backing whom. LabourList. Labour List. 5 June 2015.
  5. News: Prince. Rosa. Liz Kendall: full story of the outsider who became the Labour leadership candidate with the 'mo'. 5 June 2015. The Telegraph. 27 May 2015.
  6. News: Prince. Rosa. Liz Kendall: full story of the outsider who became the Labour leadership candidate with the 'mo'. 5 June 2015. The Telegraph. 27 May 2015.