Voting Begins in Bitter Labor Leader Contest in UK

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Voting starts Monday to decide if veteran leftist Jeremy Corbyn will remain leader of Britain's Labor party, with an ill-tempered campaign deepening divisions that threaten the party's future.

Ballots and online voting forms were being sent to party members, who have until September 21 to decide whether to replace Corbyn with MP Owen Smith, previously little known outside parliament.

Corbyn, 67, is favorite and retains the backing of most trade unions and many grassroots supporters who signed up last year to propel him to a shock leadership election win.

But he has failed to win over many of the party's MPs, 80 percent of whom backed a recent vote of no-confidence in Corbyn.

Britain's vote on June 23 to leave the European Union provided the catalyst for the leadership challenge, with many lawmakers criticizing Corbyn's performance during the campaign as lackluster.

London mayor Sadiq Khan and Labor's leader in Scotland, Kezia Dugdale, are among those backing Smith over Corbyn.

Smith triggered the contest by declaring his candidacy last month, warning that Corbyn's leadership was making the possibility of a split in the party "dangerously real."

- Principles and pragmatism -

The 46-year-old is, like Corbyn, targeting voters to the left of the party but says he is better placed to sell the message to the country and take Labor to ballot box success.

Smith distanced himself from the centrist New Labor governments under Tony Blair and Gordon Brown -- the last time the party held power, between 1997 and 2010 -- in a speech in Wales Monday.

He said that sometimes those administrations "hid away from our principles" and believed that "what matters is what works".

"What works cannot trump what is right," Smith stressed.

Meanwhile, Corbyn released a list of four key pledges including replacing the House of Lords with an elected upper chamber of parliament and introducing mandatory collective bargaining for companies with over 250 employees.

Loud boos, cheers and heckling have characterized many of the debates between Corbyn and Smith while local party meetings have been suspended during the contest over allegations of intimidation leveled against Corbyn's supporters.

- Membership surge -

An estimated 640,000 people will be able to vote in the contest. Membership of Labor has surged since Corbyn became leader, with the party now Britain's biggest by far.

However, he received a setback earlier this month when a court ruled that 130,000 new party members who joined in the six months up to July 12 could not vote.

Khan also delivered a blow on Sunday by declaring his support for Smith.

"Jeremy's personal ratings are the worst of any opposition leader on record and the Labour party is suffering badly as a result," Khan wrote in the Observer newspaper.

"Jeremy has already proved that he is unable to organize an effective team and has failed to win the trust and respect of the British people," he added.

A YouGov poll conducted last week gave the ruling Conservatives 38 percent support among voters compared to 30 percent for Labor and 13 percent for the anti-EU UK Independence Party.

Corbyn was seen as the best person to be prime minister by only 19 percent, compared to 51 percent for the incumbent, Theresa May.

Backing Smith, Dugdale wrote in the Scottish newspaper the Daily Record: "We can't pin our hopes on a leadership who speak only to the converted, rather than speaking to the country as a whole."

While May, who became premier in July after David Cameron quit following the Brexit vote, has ruled out an election soon, many commentators believe a snap poll could still be possible.

The Labor result is to be announced on September 24 at a special conference in Liverpool, northwest England.