Labour leadership battle about personality not policies, Angela Eagle claims
Former minister insists she does not regret decision to trigger the leadership contest after challenging Jeremy Corbyn
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Labour's leadership election was "mainly about personalities" when it should have been about policy, Angela Eagle has said.
The former Labour minister triggered the leadership contest against Jeremy Corbyn before pulling out, leaving Owen Smith a clear run at taking him on. But the bid backfired and Mr Corbyn strengthened his hold on the party with 62 per cent of the vote.
Ms Eagle insisted she has no regrets about triggering the contest and suggested that senior Labour figures on the backbenches will have to draw up a new vision for the party if it is going to have a chance of getting back into power,
She told ITV's Peston on Sunday: "Our leadership election was mainly about personalities as it turned out, when I think we needed to have a leadership election about policy.
"At the moment we are appealing to our core vote but we are not being able to appeal beyond that, and you can see that from some of the polling."
She dismissed suggestions that triggering the election was a mistake, saying that politicians "can't anticipate" the future.
The party now needs to look to the future and grapple with the big issues fuelling the "politics of grievance and anger", she said.
Ms Eagle said: "We've got a very experienced load of people on the backbench who have more time than they would have if they were doing frontline duties to think about the key things that I think we now need to think about as a party."
Ms Eagle insisted this is not about undermining Mr Corbyn's leadership, but added: "We will never be able to return to government if we don't answer the questions that face people in their everyday lives and appeal to them.
"We need to modernise our view of how we deal with the issues that are going on in our economy."
Growing automation and the loss of jobs this is likely to bring raises major issues which Labour must tackle head on, she warned.
"When the Labour party can answer questions like that we will appeal far beyond our base and we'll be in contention for returning to government again," she said.
Labour frontbenchers "do not have the time" to grapple with these issues and big beasts on the backbenches should do this instead, she said.
Ms Eagle said: "The luxury for someone like me now is I have got the time to think about those issues and I want to make a positive contribution to the debate on those issues which will get us back into government if we come up with the right responses for the people of Britain."
Former shadow foreign secretary Hilary Benn said labour faces the "big task" of winning the trust of the British people.
Asked if Mr Corbyn could be a good prime minister, Mr Benn told BBC One's Andrew Marr Show: "I hope we are going to win the next election.
"We have got a big task on our hands. Jeremy is leader – and I congratulated him on his victory – the party now wants to come together and hold the Government to account.
"But the challenge for every single one of us in Labour is to win the people's trust and confidence and we have got a lot of work to do to do that."
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