A cross-party parliamentary Coalition is forming to oppose British involvement in the Iran conflict. The bloc comprises the Green Party, the new left-wing "Your Party," independent MPs, and Labour backbenchers — parties and factions that share little on domestic policy but have converged on a single position: that Starmer's authorisation of US operations from British bases lacks legal authority, democratic mandate, and public support.
The Coalition's breadth follows a pattern in British politics around Middle Eastern military action. 139 Labour MPs voted against Blair on Iraq in 2003 — the largest governing-party rebellion in modern parliamentary history. In 2013, 30 Labour MPs joined Conservative rebels to defeat David Cameron's motion for Syria strikes outright. In neither case did the rebellion's direct parliamentary arithmetic matter as much as the erosion of governing credibility. Starmer reversed his initial 28 February refusal to grant base access within days. That reversal has since been publicly undermined by Lord Hermer's legal advice that the US-Israeli operation does not accord with international law and by Chatham House's analysis questioning the defensive-offensive distinction 1. Each Labour backbencher who joins the Coalition makes the next policy reversal harder to sustain and the current one harder to defend.
The Coalition has the numbers behind it. 58% of Britons oppose US use of UK bases against 21% in favour 2. That margin makes opposition to British involvement a low-risk position for most MPs and a high-risk one for the government. The Green Party and independents face no party discipline costs; Labour backbenchers do, but the electoral arithmetic favours dissent in most constituencies outside the party leadership. The emergence of "Your Party" as a distinct left-wing entity suggests the anti-war position is generating organised institutional form — a dynamic last seen when the Iraq war contributed to the fracturing of Labour's electoral base and, over a decade, to Corbyn's own rise to the party leadership in 2015.
The Coalition's immediate parliamentary tools are limited: Corbyn's base-access bill, oral questions, opposition day debates, and public pressure. But the government's vulnerability is structural. Starmer authorised base access on executive authority alone, without a parliamentary vote, against his own attorney general's legal advice 3, with majority public opposition, while maintaining that the operations are "defensive" — a characterisation that Iranian missiles striking Diego Garcia have rendered difficult to sustain in plain language. The Coalition does not need a parliamentary majority to force the government onto ground it cannot hold.
