Media playback is unsupported on your device Media caption Corbyn 'badly let down' by advisers, says Thornberry

Shadow foreign secretary Emily Thornberry has become the first MP to officially enter the race to replace Jeremy Corbyn as Labour leader.

Speaking to the BBC's Laura Kuenssberg, she said she thinks she can win the contest because she comes "from the heart of the party".

She also accused Jeremy Corbyn's advisers of "badly letting him down".

Sir Keir Starmer, Yvette Cooper, Lisa Nandy have said they are also considering standing to be leader.

Meanwhile Tony Blair has accused Labour of "letting the country down" and attacked the Labour leadership for going into the election with a "strategy for defeat".

Mr Corbyn has said he will stand down as leader "early next year" and the race to replace him could start on 7 January.

In an interview with BBC's political editor, Ms Thornberry said she had warned Mr Corbyn it would be "catastrophic" for Labour to go into "an election about Brexit when we weren't sufficiently clear on what our position was".

"Because we had a single issue election on an issue on which we weren't clear, we were in grave danger," she said.

She said, as leader, Mr Corbyn had brought Labour "back to who we really are" and offered a "clarity of vision that was incredibly appealing, but that then that got lost".

"I think that Jeremy has been really badly let down by people who advised him badly and picked up their own agenda," she said.

Seeking to underline her own leadership credentials, she said she was "tested" at taking on Boris Johnson because she had shadowed him for Labour when he was foreign secretary, and knows how to "get under" his skin.

Making reference to a description of ex-PM David Cameron by Mr Johnson, she said she was a "girly swot" who was able to "look at the details".

In a Guardian article announcing her candidacy, she said she had "pummelled" Mr Johnson every week in Parliament when she was his opposite number.

Ms Thornberry has been the MP for Islington South and Finsbury since 2005.

We're off - Emily Thornberry is the first to formally say she's definitely going to stand to replace Jeremy Corbyn as Labour leader.

There's been an awful lot of huffing and puffing without people putting their heads above the parapet, and I think she's decided she might as well get on with it.

She's the shadow foreign secretary and was was highly critical of Mr Corbyn for his neutral stance over the UK's membership of the EU.

The fact that the party membership is still overwhelmingly Remain will help her cause, as will the fact that she was seen to have done pretty well when she stood in for Jeremy Corbyn at Prime Minister's Questions.

She's been loyal to Mr Corbyn but, at the same time, she doesn't identify closely with Mr Corbyn's team.

I suspect her difficulty, maybe, is that she will be fishing in similar waters to a number of other female MPs who may enter the leadership race such as Jess Phillips, Lisa Nandy and Yvette Cooper.

They've got to get 22 Labour MPs to back them if they want to get on the ballot paper - so that is the first hurdle they've got to get over.

Shadow justice secretary Richard Burgon, a close ally of Mr Corbyn, said he welcomed the fact Ms Thornberry had entered the race, although he said he would prefer shadow business secretary Rebecca Long-Bailey to become leader.

He told BBC 2's Politics Live it was important that someone "from the left of the Labour party", who had backed Mr Corbyn's original leadership bid, should be among the list of leadership contenders.

He said that Ms Long-Bailey - who has not formally declared her candidacy - understood why the party lost support in seats that had supported Brexit, and knew how to help areas that have lost industrial jobs.

"But I think it's welcome that the members are going to have a real choice," he added.

Meanwhile, Sir Keir Starmer has told the BBC he is "seriously considering" putting himself forward for the Labour leadership.

The shadow Brexit secretary said Labour has "a mountain to climb" following its general election defeat.

Another potential contender Yvette Cooper, who lost to Mr Corbyn in the 2015 Labour leadership contest, said she would "decide over Christmas" about whether to stand.

She told Radio 4's Today programme that Labour had "a long road to travel," adding that the party needed to tackle anti-Semitism, restore "kindness to our politics" and be more "inclusive".

Image copyright Reuters Image caption Yvette Cooper was a cabinet minister in ex-PM Gordon Brown's government

Reflecting on Labour's defeat, Sir Keir - who was calling for another EU referendum - said the party had failed to "knock back" the Conservatives' "get Brexit done" slogan.

He also attacked the Labour's manifesto arguing it "had too much in it" adding "we couldn't see the wood for the trees".

Looking to the party's future, he said: "What Corbyn bought to the Labour party was a change of emphasis - radicalism that really matters - we need to build on that, not oversteer and go back to a bygone age."

Asked whether he considered himself to be a Corbynite, Sir Keir said: "I don't need someone else's name tattooed on my head to make decisions."

Labour's defeats in the North of England constituencies has led some to say the next leader should not come from London.

However Sir Keir said the Labour leader needed to "be able to talk to everyone" in the UK.

The former director of public prosecutions also insisted that "my background isn't what people think it is", adding that he had "never been in any other workplace than a factory" before he went to university.

Other candidates believed to be considering running to be leader include: