Labour's Kate Hoey will not stand in next general election
- Published
Labour MP Kate Hoey has announced she will not seek re-election after 30 years as the member for Vauxhall.
She caused controversy within her party during the 2016 EU referendum as a leading pro-Brexit figure, campaigning alongside Nigel Farage.
Ms Hoey said she would not run again after the 2015 election, but then stood when the 2017 snap-election was called.
However, in July 2018, she lost a no confidence vote in her local party - a staunchly Remain London constituency.
The London Borough of Lambeth, which includes Ms Hoey's constituency, voted 78.6% to Remain in the EU - the highest proportion of Remain voters aside from Gibraltar.
In a letter to constituents, she said she will carry on until the next general election "with energy, honesty and integrity", adding: "I will, of course, continue every single day to give all my help to constituents in Vauxhall and campaign for policies that make life better for residents".
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The Jeremy Corbyn-supporting campaign group Momentum welcomed her decision, accusing her of being a "no deal supporting, anti gay rights, fox hunting advocate".
The group tweeted: "She couldn't be more out of step with her Vauxhall constituents, and we look forward to backing a Corbyn supporting, socialist candidate in an open selection."
A handful of other long-serving MPs have also announced they will not be standing at the next general election.
While the next election is not scheduled to take place until May 2022, many believe there could be a snap poll in the autumn if there is deadlock between the next prime minister and Parliament over a no-deal Brexit.
In anticipation of this, Labour's National Executive Committee has asked all serving MPs to clarify their intentions by 18.00 BST on Monday.
Among those set to retire is Geoffrey Robinson, who has represented the seat of Coventry North West since 1976.
A leading figure in the British car industry before being elected to Parliament, he served as Paymaster General in Tony Blair's government before resigning in 1998 after it emerged that he had secretly lent fellow minister Peter Mandelson £373,000 to buy a house.
The 81-year-old MP said a recent period of "ill-health" had prompted his decision to stand down and he urged his party to select a candidate with strong local roots.
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Former shadow education secretary Stephen Twigg has said he will not contest his Liverpool West Derby seat.
Mr Twigg, the chair of the Commons international development committee, has held the seat since 2010 - having previously represented Enfield Southgate between 1997 and 2005.
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And long-serving Ealing North MP Stephen Pound is also to leave the Commons, having represented the west London constituency since 1997.
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