Here's the Labour Party's process for selecting a new leaderpublished at 15:02 BST
Peter Barnes
BBC political analyst

Lisa Nandy, Keir Starmer, Rebecca Long-Bailey and Emily Thornberry during a Labour leadership debate on Newsnight in 2020
Each party has its own rules for electing a new leader when the old one resigns.
For the Labour Party, the first stage of the process is for potential candidates to seek the support of other MPs. The current rules are that they need nominations from 20% of the parliamentary party in the House of Commons – 81 MPs – as well as backing either from individual constituency parties or affiliated organisations including trade unions.
If only one candidate reaches the required threshold they become the new leader without a full contest.
That’s what happened in 2007, for example, when Gordon Brown took over from Tony Blair.
If more than one candidate is nominated it goes to a vote of party members and affiliated supporters. That happened in 2020 when Keir Starmer beat Rebecca Long-Bailey and Lisa Nandy to be elected leader, replacing Jeremy Corbyn.
- Jess Phillips and Emily Thornberry also ran for Labour's leadership in 2020, but did not win enough support to proceed to the final ballot.
























