In the context of the Labour Party, the term "soft left" was coined in
1981, when
Neil Kinnock refused to support
Tony Benn for the
deputy leadership of the Labour Party . It described a faction of the party which disagreed with the
conservative tendencies of the Labour right and the radical tendencies of the "Bennite" left, also known as the
hard left. In parliament, it was represented by the
Tribune Group of MPs and consequently came to be known as the Tribunite left as well. The soft left also aligned itself with the
Labour Co-ordinating Committee (LCC). The soft left was initially considered another faction in the Labour left along with the Bennite left, though unlike the Bennite left, it was willing to compromise on some issues to keep the party united and electable. Neil Kinnock, a leader of the soft left, became leader of the Labour Party in
1983. When he moved rightwards in this role, the soft left followed him. As alliances were made between the soft left and the party leadership, the ideological distinctiveness of the LCC and the Tribune Group declined. During his leadership, the soft left also formed a new moderniser faction with members of the Labour right against the party's traditionalist faction. The soft left was no longer an identifiable faction on the Labour left by the time of the
1992 general election, In modern politics, the soft left refers to a faction in the Labour Party which opposed the
New Labour project but has avoided the politics of the modern Labour left, also known as the hard left. Ideologically, it is described as
centre-left and is typically thought to occupy the space in the party between the Labour left and the Labour right. It believes in compromising more traditional socialist policies to make Labour more electable. It is one of the four main factions in the modern Labour Party. The term "soft left" has been said to carry negative connotations which can suggest a less enthusiastic approach to socialism. It has been argued that the term "inside left" should be used instead. The left-leaning magazines
New Statesman and
Tribune have used the term as well. However, unlike the term "hard left", which can be considered
pejorative, "soft left" members have used the term as a self-descriptor to distance themselves from the "hard left". Soft left MP
Lisa Nandy advocates a "better name" for the faction; she has said the term "sounds a bit like you've sort of collapsed into a jellyfish".
Open Labour, the main organisation representing the soft left, ==History==