Party leader George Galloway, a left-wing firebrand who was re-elected to parliament in March after tapping into anger over the Israel-Hamas war, said yesterday (Apr 30) Panesar was one of 200 candidates the party is putting up for the vote.
Left-arm spinner Panesar, 42, played 50 tests for England, taking 167 wickets between 2006 and 2013.
Born Mudhsuden Singh Panesar in Luton, north of London, to Sikh parents who emigrated from the Indian Punjab, he became a firm fan favourite and a distinctive figure in the field in his black patka.
He will stand in Ealing Southall constituency, a majority Sikh area, in west London at the vote, which is expected to be held later this year.
To be elected, he will have to overturn a 16,084 majority set by Virendra Sharma, from the main opposition Labour party, at the last national poll in 2019.
Panesar said he wanted to stand up for the working class and address Britain’s wealth gap, something he claims the current Labour party is failing to do.
“When I played for England there was so much support from the fans and the whole nation when they put me where I am today,” he said.
“It’s my turn now to actually help the working-class people, whatever problems they have. The gap between the rich and the poor is getting bigger and bigger.”
The Workers Party has set out a 10-point programme, including a call for “an end to imperialist wars and financial domination, starting with withdrawal from NATO”.
Galloway said voters were rejecting the “Tweedledee, Tweedledum politics” of the Tories and Labour, as well as “culture war” issues over “race and gender, wokery and greenery and quackery”.
“We stand up for the working people. Our country is falling apart at the seams.... Not since 1941 have we been in such trouble,” he added.
“And there’s no Mr Churchill to step into the breach.”