Labour selects left-winger for key Leeds seat

A 'proud socialist' who once described Prince Charles as 'benefit scrounging scum' was yesterday selected as Labour's parliamentary candidate for an ultra-marginal top target seat.
LABOUR HOPEFUL: Jane Aitchison has been chosen to contest the Pudsey seat at the next election.LABOUR HOPEFUL: Jane Aitchison has been chosen to contest the Pudsey seat at the next election.
LABOUR HOPEFUL: Jane Aitchison has been chosen to contest the Pudsey seat at the next election.

Jane Aitchison was selected in a members’ vote as Labour’s general election candidate for Pudsey, held by Conservative MP Stuart Andrew with a 331 majority. Ms Aitchison, who was backed by key Jeremy Corbyn allies John McDonnell and Jon Trickett as well as the Momentum campaign, said that “out of context” her Twitter post about the Prince of Wales “could look bad”.

She admitted deleting the tweet, which appeared to link to a 2013 report about the tax affairs of Charles’s Duchy of Cornwall.

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But she said: “I don’t remember the context of it, I suspect that it was probably at a time when Benefits Street had just been launched or something like that and it was probably in a context, it probably didn’t sound the same four years on.”

SITTING MP: Stuart Andrew has a majority of 331 votes.SITTING MP: Stuart Andrew has a majority of 331 votes.
SITTING MP: Stuart Andrew has a majority of 331 votes.

Asked about her use of the word “scum”, she said: “What I would describe the Royal Family as is people who need to pay their taxes, like everyone else.”

She promised to focus on tackling NHS waiting times and “expensive” and “clapped out” trains. Ms Aitchison, who in 2011 left the Socialist Party, formerly the Trotskyist Labour ‘entryist’ group Militant, promised to focus on the “real problems” facing people in the West Yorkshire town.

She said Pudsey voters will see a woman who has worked for the Department for Work and Pensions for 25 years helping people in “desperate situations” and a trade unionist who has been “struggling to help people who feel bullied, or who need better pay or who need better terms and conditions”.

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But Mr Andrew said her “pretty appalling” comments called into question her judgment. He said: “I’ve had decent longstanding members of the Labour Party complain to me that the hard left are taking over.”