Jeremy Corbyn’s Your Party has suffered a dramatic collapse north of the border after every member of its Scottish leadership walked out en masse.
The entire 12-person interim Scottish executive committee tendered their resignations this morning, declaring the Scottish wing of the political movement effectively finished.
In announcing their departure, the group levelled serious accusations at the party’s UK headquarters, claiming they had been systematically denied the autonomy needed to operate effectively in Scotland.
The departing officials described the situation as a “generational fumble” by the national leadership, alleging that attempts to build an independent Scottish operation had been consistently thwarted by those running the party from London.
Among the most damaging allegations was that the UK leadership had actively prevented Scottish activists from standing candidates in the forthcoming Holyrood election.
The resigning committee members also accused party headquarters of refusing to share essential resources, including membership contact lists and financial support – effectively crippling their ability to organise.
The crisis reached its peak during Sunday’s meeting of the UK-wide central executive committee, where Scotland’s sole representative, Niall Christie, claimed he had been “blocked at every turn”
Mr Christie was prevented from tabling proposals that would have granted the Scottish branch access to its own membership database.
His motion seeking to affirm Scottish operational independence was also defeated.
The ruling body voted to prohibit dual membership, a contentious issue that had divided supporters of Jeremy Corbyn and Zarah Sultana since the party’s founding conference in 2025.
In their joint statement, the outgoing Scottish leadership declared: “No serious attempt to unite the left can be done through purges of socialists or by disregarding entire nations and their representatives.”They warned that these events represented “fatal blows to the Your Party project from which it cannot recover”.



