Twitter

Norwich South MP Clive Lewis, who nominated Corbyn for the party leadership, said he had also been blocked on Twitter by Blenkinsop.

"It’s only when someone mentioned to me that they’d been blocked that I found out," said Lewis. "Everyone is entitled to do what they want but I just think I’m just a bit saddened. I’m not offended – he’s got every right to do what he’s done."

Lewis said several other pro-Corbyn MPs had also noticed they had been blocked from even looking at Blenkinsop's account and suggested it was connected to the bad feeling between the different wings of the party: "I think it shows there’s a lot of work to do in the PLP [parliamentary Labour party] for us to build relationships with one another. It’s for other people to decide whether it’s petty or not. I’m sure he tweets on things that I tweet about: Marine Le Pen, inequality, injustice. There’s probably so much more in common than we’d ever disagree with.”

It seems Blenkinsop no longer wants to risk seeing any tweets from some fellow MPs, in what appears to be a strange Twitter extension of the proxy war between the pro- and anti-Corbyn factions of the parliamentary Labour party.