Just nine months ago Jeremy Corbyn was elected leader of the Labour party with an immense mandate. Though he received almost 60 per cent of the vote and finished some 170,000 votes ahead of his closest rival, the Labour leader has never had any real job security. Despite continuing to hold the support of the party membership, parliamentary elites in the Labour party have sought to overturn the democratic will of the people by ousting Corbyn because they don’t like his style.

When Corbyn was elected last September the membership was euphoric. Young people had joined the party in vast numbers looking for something different, something they heard in his promise for a kinder, gentler new version of politics. After being dragged out of the EU by the vote of an older generation, young people may now lose the champion they invested in because of a parliamentary elite that is set on challenging those values. Under the last Labour government we were given tuition fees. Under Corbyn we have the promise of lower tuition fees, the reintroduction of grants and a leader who speaks directly to us. We cannot afford to lose that at a time when the future looks so uncertain.

The feeling among most young people who voted for Corbyn is: enough is enough. Corbyn has moved to replace the dissenters and has begun forming his new shadow cabinet. The membership remains rallied behind his leadership and continues to support his mandate. If the “bitterites” in the party want a leadership election then so be it: Corbyn will be elected again.

In an attempt at reasonable unity and a show of inclusion, Corbyn appointed his own opponents to the shadow cabinet – and now they have turned on him. When Hilary Benn called at 1am yesterday morning to say he had no faith in the Labour leader, it was clear there was time for serious internal change.

UK: Corbyn supporters rally behind Labour leader after Hilary Ben’s dismissal

Today the Government’s Finance Bill will go through the House of Commons and Labour’s shadow secretary to the Treasury should have been debating it. Instead, she has resigned. Months of crucial work has been wasted and the Government’s plan to cut corporation tax and capital gains tax may go unopposed due to a personality clash within the shadow cabinet.

The country is also in utter crisis. We do not have an effective Government, this morning share in RBS and Barclays were suspended from trading after tanking more than 8 per cent, and the currency continues to fall through the floor. At a time when the Labour party should be offering a bold plan to the country, all careerists can think about is attacking their own.

I’ve heard from a Labour source that is a well-organised coup – but those who have caused this crisis ought to be seriously ashamed. The Labour Party is a democratic socialist party that democratically elected Jeremy Corbyn to be its leader by its own members. The disdain that parliamentary elites hold for the ordinary member is toxic - and on a week where so many young people are reeling from the effects of Brexit, this feels for many of us like one step too far.