Its ostensibly successful face-saving amendment to the SNP's ceasefire motion and its apparent pressure on the speaker, Lindsay Hoyle, to upturn parliamentary convention brought about a crisis in the Commons, and has done little to appease angry voters.
Whatever motion Labour ended up ramming through, it came too late. The party's first position on Gaza, refusing to condemn breaches of international law (or even call them that), and refusing to call for a ceasefire, has made too strong an impression for it to be erased by any new modifications.
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