When Jeremy Corbyn walks onto the debate stage for tonight’s head-to-head showdown with Boris Johnson, he will have two adversaries in mind.
One will be on stage alongside him: Boris Johnson, the third prime minister Corbyn has faced in his four years as Labour leader.
The second will be the mountain of polling that shows Corbyn’s party trailing Johnson by a healthy margin in the race to Downing Street. ?
But the role of underdog is one Corbyn relishes. His election as leader of the opposition in 2015 was astonishing; reluctantly thrown into the race with minutes to spare, with the sole intention of shifting debate within the party and few aspirations of rising atop it, Corbyn rode a wave of grassroots support to a landslide victory at the members’ ballot.
Two years later, pundits predicted an electoral annihilation for the lifelong activist when Theresa May, coasting on a honeymoon period in office, called a snap general election.?
The gap between the parties was far wider then than it is now. But over the course of an enthused and dynamic campaign, Corbyn closed it to a whisker — ultimately denying May an outright victory that had seemed a formality just weeks earlier.
Corbyn holds one of the rallies that became a hallmark of his 2017 election campaign.
Ian Forsyth/Getty Images
Now, Labour’s most left-wing leader since the 1980s faces another battle. Fighting political apathy from a weary electorate, a resurgent Remain vote that has splintered his base, and a far more natural campaigner in Johnson than May, Corbyn knows he will have few chances to break through and change the narrative.
But he has one tonight.
Standing alongside Johnson is a victory in itself; Labour’s long and bitter period of soul-searching over Brexit saw the party leak Remain supporters, but sidelining the Liberal Democrats gives Corbyn a chance to claw them back.
Corbyn, long criticized by Remainers for his lackluster campaigning during the 2016 Brexit referendum, has been torn between helping his party grow in cities and among younger voters, and maintaining the support of Leave voters in longstanding Labour heartlands.
Elsewhere, Johnson will likely hit Corbyn throughout the debate on the controversies that have tainted his leadership; namely an anti-Semitism scandal which haunts the Labour Party and has led to accusations that Corbyn has failed to act strongly enough. Corbyn, for his part, said on Monday that he has “spent (his) life opposing racism in any form.”
The Labour leader will also expect to be painted as a radical socialist with outdated policies. Johnson, after all, began his campaign by accusing Corbyn’s front bench of hating wealth and aspiration so much that they “point their fingers at individuals with a relish and a vindictiveness not seen since Stalin persecuted the kulaks.”
Corbyn on a campaign stop this year.
Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images
Corbyn’s bold promises of nationalization, increased public spending and an end to student tuition fees headlined a strong campaign in 2017. His pledge of free broadband for the UK last week has provided a taster of similar pledges to come.
Corbyn said last week that his party is putting forward “the most radical and far-reaching plan for real change in our lifetimes.”
If he is going to get the British public on board, he may need to land a killer blow tonight.