THERE is now a growing element of fear entering the soul of the Parliamentary Labour Party.

It is the product of the hard line left-wing leadership of the party, aided and abetted by Momentum, the group which is possibly even more fiercely left-wing than Labour’s top MPs.

Moderates, who are now probably a majority in the Parliamentary Party are, however, reluctantly toeing the party line because they are fearful that if they do not, they could be barred from standing as candidates at the next general election.

The Labour Party has always boasted it is a “broad church” capable of holding all types of left-of-centre politicians. That boast seems to have been thrown out the window.

Some MPs have been privately claiming they’ve been warned that if they stray from the official party line, by even so much as an inch, they could find themselves out on their ears, sacked by their local constituency party, when the next election comes round.

So much for free speech. Jeremy Corbyn should be bluntly told that a party governed by fear is heading for trouble. For a start, they should spend more time and effort holding the government in check than in scaring those they regard as the awkward squad in their own movement.

I KNEW James Chapman when he was political editor of the Daily Mail. He was an agreeable, cheerful soul, who, like all good political reporters, was far more interested in getting a good story than being immersed in politics itself.

However, he left to join the civil service, ultimately to become a principal aide to Brexit Secretary David Davis. No one was more surprised than me, therefore, to hear this supposedly mild man, after he left the Brexit department, launching into a ferocious onslaught, some of it highly personal, on his former boss.

It turned out he was a hugely outspoken anti-Brexiteer. I have never seen such a transformation on anybody, it is amazing how merely standing on a soap box can change your whole demeanour.

To his credit, Davis refrained from hitting back. Now Chapman is trying to form a new political party. Haven’t we got more than enough already?

Talking of soap boxes, I remember Prime Minister John Major campaigning on one during the 1992 election. After one speech, an agitated activist came rushing up to him, claiming: “Prime Minister, you were off message.”

To which Major immediately replied: “How can I be off message? I am the message.”

Peerless.

THE battle over the Big Ben bongs continues unabated and (at the time of writing, anyway) there seems little prospect of an early resolution.

However, it is reported that the bongs annoy Sally, wife of Commons Speaker, John Bercow. It is claimed they keep her awake as she tries to sleep in the Speaker’s palatial apartment at Westminster. One satisfied customer, at least!