But what did the leader, what did Jeremy Corbyn say? That “the government should oppose his extradition”. I mean, frankly, it’s best that Jeremy Corbyn doesn’t say anything rather than tepid remarks like that. If there was an opposition leader who could stand up to the Mays, the Hunts, and the rest, then perhaps we’d have some sense of real truth in debate. To simply say that the government should oppose the extradition is not enough. It should be spelt out in parliament what this extradition might mean. That it threatens Julian’s life; that he could spend the rest of his life in the kind of conditions that the UN rapporteur on torture has already described [as torture]. That’s what we need to hear from the political opposition in Britain.