Keir Starmer has won the leadership of the Labour Party by a landslide after taking 56 per cent of the votes cast.
The human rights lawyer beat rivals Rebecca Long-Bailey and Lisa Nandy after the first round of counting.
It marks a significant change of direction for the party, with a move away from the politics of Jeremy Corbyn and Ed Miliband who led Labour over the last decade.
It’s the honour and privilege of my life to be elected as Leader of the Labour Party.
— Keir Starmer (@Keir_Starmer) April 4, 2020
I will lead this great party into a new era, with confidence and hope, so that when the time comes, we can serve our country again – in government. pic.twitter.com/F4X088FTYY
His victory came after the planned special conference to unveil the winner had to be shelved because of the coronavirus crisis.
Angela Rayner won the deputy leadership race by 52.6 per cent of the vote.
Mr Starmer, who was named after Labour’s first parliamentary leader Keir Hardie, said his election was the “honour and privilege of my life”.
In an acceptance speech posted on social media, he said his mission is to restore trust in Labour as “a force for good and a force for change”.
He also apologised for anti-Semitism in the party which has brought “grief” to Jewish communities.
Defeated candidate Ms Long-Bailey wrote on Facebook: “I want to pay tribute to Keir and to Lisa and their respective teams, who each led fantastic campaigns.
“Keir Starmer will be a brilliant prime minister and I can’t wait to see him in Number 10.
“I will do all I can to make that a reality and to ensure the Labour Party gets into government with a transformative agenda at the next election,” she said.
London mayor Sadiq Khan said: “I’m delighted that Keir Starmer and Angela Rayner have been selected as the new leader and deputy leader of the Labour Party.
“This is an unprecedented time and our country faces extraordinary challenges. . . . Keir and Angela are best suited to the scale of this challenge and I look forward to working closely with them and their new team to make it happen,” he said.
The shadow Brexit secretary — who was made Queen’s Counsel in 2002, served as head of the Crown Prosecution Service and accepted a knighthood in 2014 — has struggled to shake off perceptions of privilege.
But Mr Starmer has stressed his upbringing by his toolmaker father and nurse mother in Southwark, south London, when dismissing allegations he is too middle class to speak to the party’s historic heartlands.
His CV includes co-founding the renowned Doughty Street Chambers and advising the Policing Board to ensure the Police Service of Northern Ireland complied with human rights laws.
He entered Parliament as the MP for Holborn and St Pancras in 2015 and was quickly elevated to the front bench, serving as a shadow Home Office minister before being promoted to shadow Brexit secretary soon after the EU referendum in 2016.
Mr Starmer was instrumental in getting Labour to back a second referendum. He has since said that the issue is settled, but has refused to rule out campaigning for Britain to return to the EU in the long term.
During the leadership race he pledged to raise income tax for the top 5 per cent of earners, to campaign for EU freedom of movement to continue and to push for “common ownership” of public services such as mail, rail and energy.
He has also vowed to introduce a Prevention of Military Intervention Act if he becomes PM to ensure Britain could only go to war if the Commons agreed.
The contest was triggered in December when Mr Corbyn announced he would quit as Labour leader after the party suffered its worst general election defeat since 1935.
He presided over years of faction fighting, accusations of institutional anti-Semitism and bitter divisions over Brexit.
Ballot papers were sent out in late February to party members, members of affiliated trades unions and groups, and 14,700 “registered supporters” who paid £25 (€28) to take part on a one-off basis. Voting closed on Thursday.
Mr Starmer led the race from the start, winning the backing of 89 members of the parliamentary party in the first round of the contest, before securing the support of more than a dozen affiliated organisations in the second stage.
Veteran left-winger Mr Corbyn became party leader in 2015, a result which marked a fundamental change of direction for Labour.
He led the party through two general election defeats, the last of which saw seats which had been Labour for generations turned blue as the party’s hitherto impregnable “red wall” crumbled in the face of the Tory advance.
The new leader will have to find a way to rebuild Labour support in its traditional heartlands, but his first major challenge will be to establish a clear voice on the coronavirus crisis. – PA