George Galloway announces bid to challenge Tom Watson at next election

Anti-Israel veteran politician will stand in West Bromwich East against the Deputy Leader of the Labour Party at the next General Election

George Galloway and Tom Watson

Veteran left-wing politician George Galloway has announced he will bid to unseat Labour deputy leader Tom Watson at the next general election.

Mr Galloway is planning to stand as a pro-Brexit, pro-Jeremy Corbyn independent candidate against Mr Watson in his West Bromwich East constituency.

The 64-year-old former Labour member said he is planning to hold a campaign launch event in the Black Country “within 10 days”.

He claimed Mr Watson had tried to “wreck” Brexit, while the Labour Deputy Leader accused Galloway of having “caused more reputational damage” to Labour than almost any other politician, and called the announcement of the electoral contest “nonsense”.

The incumbent senior Labour party figure has held the seat since 2001, and had a majority at the 2017 election of 7,713.

A crowd-funding website to raise £25,000 towards Mr Galloway’s campaign has raised more than £5,000 in 24 hours.

Speaking to PA Media, Mr Galloway said: “The whole thing has really taken off.

“This is the most popular thing I have ever done and I have been in politics 50 years – it has gone like wildfire.”

Mr Galloway said he “used to be friendly” with Mr Watson, adding “I have the texts to prove it”.

He linked his prospective candidacy announcement to a critical letter written by Mr Watson to Labour National Executive Committee (NEC) general secretary Jennie Formby, over the bitter antisemitism row which has engulfed the party.

Mr Watson has written to Ms Formby calling for the party to publish its submission to a watchdog investigating antisemitism claims and raising allegations that she had deleted emails relating to cases.

The NEC general secretary has denied Mr Watson’s accusations.

The letter came in the wake of a damning BBC Panorama documentary about Labour’s handling of antisemitism claims.

Labour has denied the allegations and written a complaint to the BBC.

But Mr Galloway said that what he termed as Mr Watson’s “criticism of Jennie Formby” had been “the straw that broke the camel’s back”.

He added: “Attacking a woman with breast cancer in the middle of chemotherapy in completely misleading terms, went well beyond the pale.”

Mr Galloway was a Labour MP from 1987 until 2003, when he was expelled after the party found him guilty of bringing the party into disrepute.

At the time, he claimed to have been the victim of “a politically-motivated kangaroo court”.

He was last an MP with Respect, becoming the member for Bethnal Green and Bow in 2005 and later representing the Bradford West constituency following a 2012 by-election before losing the seat three years later.

Galloway was sacked last month from his TalkRadio show for making allegedly antisemitic comments online. He celebrated the defeat of Tottenham to Liverpool in the Champions League final saying it meant there would be “No #Israel flags on the Cup”.

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