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A New Party For the Many Not The Few But The Billionaire Corporate Media Will Adopt Full Rabid Dog Posture

Today, after 14 years, Zarah Sultana MP has announced her resignation from the Labour Party.


In a bold statement, Sultana confirmed that she, alongside Jeremy Corbyn, will co-lead the founding of a new political party with other Independent MPs, campaigners, and grassroots activists from across the country.

Sultana’s decision comes from a deep frustration with what she describes as a broken Westminster system and a political establishment that serves the wealthy elite. “Just 50 families now own more wealth than half the UK population,” she highlighted, pointing to rising poverty, obscene inequality, and the failure of the two-party system to deliver meaningful change.

She recalled her suspension from Labour a year prior for voting to abolish the two-child benefit cap—an action that would have lifted 400,000 children out of poverty. “I’d do it again,” she stated defiantly, also noting her opposition to scrapping winter fuel payments for pensioners.

Critically, Sultana accused the current government of targeting disabled people with harmful policies and expressed dismay that mainstream politics continues to offer only cruelty and neglect. She slammed Labour for abandoning its mission to improve people’s lives and called out the political establishment’s bipartisan smear campaign against those opposing what she described as a genocide in Gaza.

“The truth is clear: this government is an active participant in genocide. And the British people oppose it,” she wrote. Her call to action is urgent:

“We are not going to take this anymore.”

Sultana argued that ordinary people deserve affordable homes, fair bills, and properly funded public services—not endless war and wealth hoarding by a tiny elite. She concluded with a stark choice for the future:

“In 2029, the choice will be stark: socialism or barbarism.”

Billionaires, she says, already have three parties fighting for their interests. Now, it’s time for the rest of us to have one.

Why the Corporate Media Will Always Unite Against the Left

When movements emerge that genuinely challenge wealth and power, they face not only political opposition but also the ferocious resistance of the corporate media. History repeatedly shows us that the establishment press will unite against those on the political left who advocate for greater equality, fairness, and justice—both at home and abroad.

The reason is simple: corporate media outlets are themselves part of the very elite structures that left-wing movements seek to challenge. They are owned by billionaires, hedge funds, and powerful conglomerates whose profits rely on maintaining the status quo. These outlets have a vested interest in suppressing or discrediting any political movement that threatens concentrated wealth and power.

When Jeremy Corbyn led the Labour Party, the British media, across tabloids and broadsheets alike, conducted an unprecedented campaign of vilification against him. Smears, misrepresentations, and relentless personal attacks dominated the coverage. The same tactics are now likely to be deployed against Sultana, Corbyn, and anyone who joins their new party.

The corporate media often labels demands for justice—whether in the form of fair wages, social housing, or international solidarity—as radical, dangerous, or unworkable. Campaigns to uplift the poor, end wars, and oppose global injustices are painted as extremist, while the obscene wealth hoarding by a tiny minority is normalised.

As Sultana herself notes, when people of conscience speak out against atrocities like the ongoing tragedy in Gaza, they are often smeared and marginalised. This is no accident. Media narratives are carefully constructed to delegitimise anti-war voices and protect the interests of those who profit from conflict.

The left challenges the foundations of economic and geopolitical power, and the corporate media—whether subtly or overtly—acts as a guardian of those foundations.

But as more people grow disillusioned with mainstream politics and corporate spin, movements like the one Sultana and Corbyn propose may yet build the strength to break through.

The battle will not just be for votes—it will be for the truth. And those seeking a fairer, more compassionate society will have to fight not just against political parties, but against a media machine determined to silence them.

The time is now.

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