Corbyn was confirmed in his position on Saturday with 61.8 per cent of the vote among party members and supporters, seeing off a challenger backed by the majority of his lawmakers, who believe he can never lead them into government.
But the main opposition party remains bitterly split between left-wingers and moderates, at a time of major change in Britain as Prime Minister Theresa May's Conservative government negotiates the country's withdrawal from the European Union.
The 67-year-old said Sunday he was "reaching out" to his critics -- but his proposal to give more decision-making power to party members risks being seen as an attempt to sideline MPs.
"What I want is more power for members, more power for supporters, in order to ensure we get policies that do have support throughout the whole party," he told BBC television.
"There's a lot of thirst for change out there, people want to see things done differently."
Many moderate MPs publicly accepted Corbyn's re-election and backed his call for unity, but the anonymous briefings against him continued in the Sunday newspapers.
In a sign of the entrenched divisions, Labour peer Lord Parry Mitchell resigned from the party saying that it was a "lost cause" under its current leadership.
He blamed Corbyn for being "lukewarm" about tackling anti- Semitism in the party and condemned his left-wing supporters.
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