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Your Party membership stands at 50,000, Sky News can reveal.

The figure is well short of the 800,000 people who expressed interest when it launched, and it is significantly below the 100,000 to 200,000 insiders hoped would join officially as members following its launch in July.

Politics latest: Farage predicts early general election in 2027

It puts the Zarah Sultana and Jeremy Corbyn-led party close behind the Liberal Democrats, whose membership has fallen to 60,000.

While still deemed to be respectable to those involved in the party, the membership update has been taken as a warning that the factional infighting between Ms Sultana and Mr Corbyn has damaged its hopes of immediately building a mass movement.

However, Your Party said it expects membership to increase as more members move over from the “unauthorised” membership portal launched by Ms Sultana on 18 September.

Tensions between the two leaders reached a boiling point when Ms Sultana sent out unauthorised emails encouraging paid membership without Mr Corbyn’s consent – while also claiming her actions were the result of being sidelined by a “sexist boys club”.

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Mr Corbyn is expected to announce the 50,000 figure at a rally in Islington on Monday evening.

He said: “I am excited to announce that 50,000 people have now become members of Your Party.

“This major milestone reflects what Your Party is all about: a mass, democratic movement for change. From local rallies to mass regional assemblies, people up and down the country are coming together to build this party from the ground up.

“This is just the beginning. At the end of this month, we will host our founding conference. This will be the moment that members come together to launch our mass, democratic movement for real change.”

Ms Sultana’s decision to launch her own membership portal in September culminated in a standoff over the control of £800,000 worth of donations, which has only just been resolved.

The pot of money had been held by an entity called MOU operations – controlled by former Labour MP Beth Winter, former Labour mayor Jamie Driscoll and former South African politician Andrew Feinstein – who have now all quit.

Sky News revealed last week that Ms Sultana now had sole control of the £800,000 and that she has assured Mr Corbyn that the money will be transferred to the party as a whole.

It is understood the money has not yet been transferred in full.

The money collected by MOU in membership fees is not expected to be transferred to Your Party as those who paid are entitled to a refund.

Some 20,000 people signed up to Ms Sultana’s portal but Your Party still does not have access to their emails, meaning there is no way of contacting them.

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Sky’s Serena Barker-Singh investigates Corbyn’s new party.

There are concerns within Your Party that the direct beneficiary of the row has been the Greens, led by Zack Polanski, whose membership has more than doubled to 150,000 people.

Following the publication of the figures, Mr Polanski described the Greens as the “only real opposition left in British politics”.

Pointing to the threat he also poses to the Labour Party, which has slumped to 17 points in the polls, Mr Polanski said his desire was not to be “disappointed” with Labour but to “replace them”.

According to Labour’s annual accounts published in August, party membership now stands at 333,235 – down from a peak of 532,046 at the end of 2019, when Mr Corbyn was still Labour leader.

However, Sir Keir Starmer still leads the largest party in the UK.

Read more:
Inside Jeremy Corbyn’s new party and the battle for leadership

The battle for Your Party’s soul continues

As of August this year, the Conservatives were reported to have 123,000 members, while their rivals Reform have 266,172.

In recent weeks, Ms Sultana – who has spoken favourably about some form of electoral pact with the Greens – has sought to draw clearer dividing lines with Mr Polanski.

In a recent interview with Politics Joe, the Coventry South MP described Your Party as “anti-Zionist” and also suggested the UK should leave the military alliance NATO immediately.

Mr Polanski, who is Jewish, has said he is proud of his identity but that he does not describe himself as a Zionist.

He has also taken a more cautious stance on NATO than Ms Sultana, saying that while he supported the UK’s eventual withdrawal he was not advocating for it to leave the alliance.

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Starmer vows to fight any plots to oust him – as Labour MPs fear major budget backlash

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Starmer vows to fight any plots to oust him - as Labour MPs fear major budget backlash

Sir Keir Starmer is vowing to fight any challenge to his leadership rather than stand aside, amid claims of plotting by MPs being compared to TV’s The Traitors.

Number 10 is going on the attack ahead of a difficult budget this month, with fears it could prove so unpopular that Labour MPs may move against Sir Keir.

But Sky News political editor Beth Rigby reports the prime minister “has no intention of giving way”, with allies warning any challenge would lead to a “drawn-out leadership election, spook the markets, and create more chaos that further damages the Labour brand”.

One senior figure told Rigby any move against Sir Keir would be more likely to arrive after next May’s elections, rather than the budget.

They said many Labour MPs could probably get behind measures like tax rises for wealthier workers, pensioners and landlords, as well as scrapping the two-child benefit cap, if that’s what the chancellor announces on 26 November.

But there are a series of potentially damaging elections in May, including in London and for the Senedd in Wales, as Labour face a challenge from Reform UK on the right and parties like the Greens and Plaid Cymru on the left.

Rigby said there is a “settled view among some very senior figures in the party that Starmer lacks the charisma and communication skills to take on Nigel Farage and win over the public, particularly if or when he breaks a bunch of manifesto pledges”.

Sir Keir and Rachel Reeves have refused to rule out breaking their manifesto promises not to raise income tax, national insurance, or VAT at the budget.

The Number 10 operation to ward off a challenge comes after Sky News deputy political editor Sam Coates likened the febrile mood in the Labour high command to the TV hit The Traitors.

Speaking on the Politics At Sam And Anne’s podcast, he said: “A minister got in touch at the start of the weekend to say they believe that there’s some quite substantial plotting going on.

“They say there was at least one cabinet minister telling colleagues that Keir Starmer, and I quote, is finished.”

We’ve been here before…


John Craig

Jon Craig

Chief political correspondent

@joncraig

When Boris Johnson was facing mutiny from Conservative MPs, his allies launched “Operation Save Big Dog”.

When Margaret Thatcher was about to be ousted by her rebellious MPs in 1990, she declared: “I fight on, I fight to win.”

And Harold Wilson, constantly paranoid about plots, famously quipped in 1969: “I know what’s going on. I’m going on.”

Boris Johnson was ousted less than six months after “Operation Save Big Dog”, Margaret Thatcher resigned the following morning after saying “I fight on”, and Harold Wilson lost a general election to Edward Heath a year after vowing that he would go on.

Just saying.

Read more:
What tax rises will Reeves announce?

Coates said the cabinet minister “absolutely and totally denies they are up to anything nefarious whatsoever”.

“I actually do think that this is all in the style of The Traitors, because I’m not sure that there is hard and fast evidence of plotting – there might be some hints from some quarters,” he added.

“But what seems to be completely logical is that if you’re a bit worried in Number 10, you’re trying to pitch roll and ward off people who are maybe thinking about the need to position themselves by starting to get out rumours of plots and hoping that the political system turns against them for disloyalty.”

Who is plotting to unseat the PM? Pic: PA
Image:
Who is plotting to unseat the PM? Pic: PA

Cloak-and-dagger

Reports emerged on Tuesday night in The Times, The Guardian, and from the BBC of a “bunker mode” in Number 10, “regime change”, and “plotting” to replace Sir Keir.

Responding to the reports, Health Secretary Wes Streeting denied he was seeking to oust the prime minister.

A spokesperson for Mr Streeting told Sky News: “These claims are categorically untrue.

“Wes’s focus has entirely been on cutting waiting lists for the first time in 15 years, recruiting 2,500 more GPs and rebuilding the NHS that saved his life.”

It's not me, insists Wes Streeting. Pic: Reuters
Image:
It’s not me, insists Wes Streeting. Pic: Reuters

However, there is clearly a co-coordinated campaign by allies of the increasingly unpopular Sir Keir to try to prevent a leadership challenge by a cabinet minister or stalking horse.

Sir Keir’s biographer Tom Baldwin questioned the logic of those briefing from within the corridors of power.

“I’m at a loss to understand why anyone would think this sort of briefing will help Keir Starmer, the government, or even their own cause,” he said on social media. “Some people just can’t resist, I guess, but it’s all a bit nuts.”

What next?

It comes ahead of Prime Minister’s Questions this lunchtime, handing Tory leader Kemi Badenoch the chance to make it an awkward afternoon for Sir Keir.

The health secretary will start his day on Sky News’ Morning With Ridge And Frost and will then speak at an NHS providers’ conference.

Watch and follow live coverage across Sky News – including in the Politics Hub.

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Bank of England’s Breeden warns watered-down stablecoin rules risk stability

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Bank of England’s Breeden warns watered-down stablecoin rules risk stability

Weaker stablecoin rules in the UK could risk financial stability and trigger a credit crunch, according to the Bank of England’s deputy governor, Sarah Breeden.

“We have a different set of risks to manage as we transition to bringing in this new form of money,” Breeden’s told Reuters on Tuesday. Last week, she said that the UK can keep pace with the US on stablecoin regulation.

Crypto industry leaders have criticized the BOE’s stablecoin consultation paper released on Monday, which proposed a relatively strict stance on stablecoin regulation in comparison to the US.

One of the biggest criticisms was the BOE’s decision to retain its controversial stablecoin proposal, which limits stablecoin holdings to 10,000 British pounds ($26,300) for individuals and 10 million British pounds ($13.1 million) for most companies.

Breeden said this would “halve the stress” on banks and credit creation caused by customers withdrawing bank deposits to buy stablecoins. She didn’t state when the measure could potentially be lifted.

Source: Cointelegraph

Stablecoins have boomed into a $312 billion market in 2025, and nations around the world are looking to follow US President Donald Trump’s signing of the GENIUS Act earlier this year to craft similar legislation that balances industry innovation with consumer protection.

The UK built regulatory momentum from a meeting between UK Chancellor Rachel Reeves and US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent in September, when the two countries agreed to strengthen their coordination on crypto and stablecoin activities.

Breeden says Circle-SVB incident justifies 40% backing rule

The UK’s top bank also proposed measures on stablecoin issuers, requiring them to hold 40% of the assets backing their tokens with the BOE without earning interest.