UB40 backs United Kingdom opposition leader Corbyn
The Labour leader will set a target of generating 65% of United Kingdom electricity from renewable sources by 2030 in a bid to make the country a world leader in green technology.
So it is the remaining members, led by guitarist and vocalist Robin Campbell, who have endorsed Mr Corbyn.
With Mr Corbyn odds-on favourite to be re-elected Labour leader later this month, moderate MPs are privately debating whether to split from the party themselves.
The fall in the number of pubs providing a showcase for up-and-coming bands could rob the United Kingdom of future stars, he said.
And it was not lost on Simply Red singer Mick Hucknall, who is definitely no friend of Mr Corbyn.
The chart-toppers, in their heyday during the 1980s and 1990s, hailed the Opposition leader as “incorruptible” and a “man of the people” as they prepared to join him for a press conference in London.
Despite presiding over a year of turmoil and division since winning the Labour leadership, the 67-year-old is on course to comfortably hold on to his job.
A spokesman for the band said: “Jeremy’s campaign is about bringing people together and reaching out to all sections of society, to build a Labour government and a Labour movement that can rebuild and transform Britain so that no one and no community is left behind”. “Westminster needs big change, and Jeremy is the man to do it”.
“Labour cannot turn a blind eye and allow the Tories to condemn thousands more people to a life on the streets or without a home they can call their own”.
UB40 aren’t the only celebrities endorsing Corbyn.
Asked at the conference what politicians could learn from bands, Corbyn said: ‘Teamwork, coming together, supporting each other, being creative together, working together.
Corbyn also said he had “absolutely no desire whatsoever to go on Strictly Come Dancing”.
Reiterating his plan to build 1.5 million new homes in five years, half of which would be social homes, and launch a £50 million outreach fund to end rough sleeping, Mr Smith said: “If Jeremy continues as leader, I really fear that the Tories will be in power until at least 2025”.