Jeremy Corbyn vows to target ‘vested interests’ at election launch

Jeremy Corbyn today admitted he would delay Brexit for at least six months to hold a second referendum – and refused to rule out backing Remain.

Launching Labour’s election campaign, the veteran left-winger said if he becomes PM he will renegotiate a ‘sensible deal’ with the EU, before putting it to the public. 

However, he did not say whether he would support Remain rather than his own new package in that vote. 

The flannelling came as Mr Corbyn effectively declared class war by vowing to tackle ‘corrupt’ business and ramp up public spending.

The Labour leader laid out a platform of tax hikes for the better-off and nationalisation of key industries in his first keynote speech of the contest.

He contrasted his union-backed party with the Tories who represented the ‘super-rich’, saying only the Left would take on the establishment’s ‘vested interests’.

The firebrand stance came as the main parties gear up for what promises to be a bitter six-week struggle for the country’s future ahead of the December 12 showdown.

A YouGov poll today found the Tories have a 15 point lead over Labour – but underlined the way the electorate is fragmenting, with the Lib Dems and Brexit Party showing significant support. 

Both Mr Corbyn and Mr Johnson are facing massive challenges to get their message across. 

Two Jewish Labour groups have announced they will not back Mr Corbyn as PM after his hard-Left supporters brought a vile wave of anti-Semitism to the party.  

Other MPs are also agonising over whether they can endorse him as a fit person to be in Downing Street.  

Meanwhile, Mr Johnson is facing an exodus of moderate MPs. Culture Secretary Nicky Morgan cited the ‘abuse’ she had received in the fraught Westminster environment as she became the latest high profile figure to stand down at the election.

Jeremy Corbyn (pictured giving his speech today) is vowing to tackle the ‘corrupt system’ of tax dodgers and bad bosses

Mr Corbyn (pictured with shadow foreign secretary Emily Thornberry, left, and Baroness Chakrabarti, right) said he would hold a second Brexit referendum within six months

Mr Corbyn (pictured with shadow foreign secretary Emily Thornberry, left, and Baroness Chakrabarti, right) said he would hold a second Brexit referendum within six months

After previously pledging that he would rather be ‘dead in a ditch’ than extend Brexit beyond October 31, Mr Johnson said today that it was Mr Corbyn’s fault the UK’s withdrawal from the EU had been put back until January 31.

‘Today should have been the day that Brexit was delivered and we finally left the EU,’ he said.

‘But, despite the great new deal I agreed with the EU, Jeremy Corbyn refused to allow that to happen – insisting upon more dither, more delay and more uncertainty for families and business.’  

However, Mr Corbyn said: ‘We need to take it out of the hands of the politicians and trust the people to have the final say.

‘Labour will get Brexit sorted within six months. We’ll let the people decide whether to leave with a sensible deal or remain. That really isn’t complicated.

‘We will carry out whatever the people decide so that we can get on with delivering the real change Britain needs after years of Conservative cuts to vital services and tax handouts to the richest.’

Even that timetable looks optimistic, as Mr Corbyn is proposing to negotiate a new deal with the EU before then, which Labour might then advise the public to reject in favour of Remaining.  

Unveiling a highly personalised anti-elite message, Mr Corbyn attacked the Duke of Westminster, 28 – a godfather to Prince George – for being a ‘dodgy landlord’.

He singled out billionaire chemicals executive Sir James Ratcliffe as a ‘big polluter’ and hedge fund boss Crispin Odey as a ‘greedy banker’. 

And he accused Mike Ashley, the Sports Direct chief executive, of exploiting his workforce.

But Tory MPs warned that Labour was simply going after people who create jobs.

Hammering home his anti-elite message, Mr Corbyn said that ‘real change is coming’.

‘This election is a once-in-a-generation chance to transform our country, take on the vested interests holding people back and ensure that no community is left behind,’ he said.

‘When Labour wins, the nurse wins, the pensioner wins, the student wins, the office worker wins, the engineer wins. We all win.’

Mr Corbyn said Labour puts its faith in the ‘spirit and commitment to community’ of the British people, adding ‘it is your country’, not the property of ‘born-to-rule Conservatives’ who ‘protect the privileged few’.

He claimed the elite are scared of the British people, which is why ‘they’ll throw everything at us’ in this election ‘because they know we’re not afraid to take them on’.

Shrugging off concerns about a winter election, Mr Corbyn said: ‘Labour will be out there in every city, town and village… bringing a message of hope and change to every community. Even if the rivers freeze over, we’re going out to offer real change for the many, not the few.’

Both Mr Corbyn and Boris Johnson (pictured today) are facing massive challenges to get their message across

Both Mr Corbyn and Boris Johnson (pictured today) are facing massive challenges to get their message across

He added: ‘Boris Johnson thought he was being smart holding this election in a dark and cold December. He thinks you won’t go out to vote. He thinks you won’t go out to campaign.

‘All we need to keep us warm is the thought of removing Boris Johnson’s Conservatives from government and the chance to rebuild and transform our country.’

Alongside Mrs Morgan, Theresa May’s former deputy David Lidington, Amber Rudd and minister Mimms Davies have announced they are leaving the Commons, with MPs voicing fears that the One Nation wing of the Tories is evaporating.

The Duke of Westminster, Hugh Grosvenor, came under fire over a bid to demolish five buildings in Westminster and replace them with new shops and homes.

In 2016, MPs on the business, innovation and skills select committee accused Mr Ashley of running Sports Direct like a ‘Victorian workhouse’. The company said it would address ‘any shortcomings’.

Sir James’s firm Ineos has been accused of contributing to plastic pollution of the oceans and has launched a campaign to turn the tide.

Hedge fund manager Mr Odey has been accused of profiting from the Brexit vote and the 2017 hung parliament by speculating on the value of the pound.

Read more at DailyMail.co.uk