This article of mine appears in the current issue of the Jerusalem Report, dated 27 September 2021
Jeremy Corbyn’s election as leader of the UK’s Labour party in 2015 heralded a period of controversy, rancour, rebellion and resignations. The internal turmoil largely centered on a perceived growth of frank antisemitism within the ranks of the party, countenanced or down-played by the leadership. At the height of the storm, the party was made the subject of a legally-based inquiry into antisemitism within its organization, and was subsequently sued for libel based on its reaction to a BBC investigation into the allegations. These events undoubtedly played a part in the Labour party’s worst electoral defeat for eighty years in the general election of 2019, and Corbyn being replaced as leader.
Corbyn’s election as leader, an unpleasant
surprise to most of his parliamentary colleagues, represented a
well-orchestrated protest from the left-wing of the party at the social
democratic policies that had marked the thirteen years of “New Labour” under
Tony Blair. Ed Miliband, Blair’s marginally
more left-wing successor, had done little as leader to assuage the thirst of
the grass roots for more full-blooded socialist policies.
Corbyn
was a known left-wing rebel who had often voted against his party in its “New
Labour” guise. From the moment he became
leader, hard-left views on a variety of topics became mainstream within the
Labour party. Among them was “intersectionality”,
the accepted left-wing term for perceiving a direct link between all victims of
oppression, whether sexual, racial, political, or economic, and for supporting
all as a matter of course. Accepted left-wing
doctrine deemed Palestinians to be oppressed and Israel to be the oppressor. As
a result unequivocal support for the Palestinian cause and opposition to Israel
was de rigueur.
Some
zealous supporters of Corbyn found it convenient to label their opposition to
Israel anti-Zionism, making no distinction between opposing Israeli government
policies and the very existence of the state. Some found it difficult to
separate opposition to Israel from opposition to Jews generally – Israel was,
after all, the Jewish state – and anti-Zionism morphed easily enough into plain
antisemitism.
As cases of alleged antisemitic activity within
the Labour party began to mount, so did public unease. Corbyn deemed it expedient to set up an
internal inquiry. Its findings,
announced in May 2016, were that the party was not "overrun by antisemitism
or other forms of racism", a conclusion that convinced few, particularly as
the tide of antisemitic incidents and allegations within the party showed no
signs of abating. Finally in May 2019
the Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC), a body legally charged with promoting
and enforcing the UK’s equality and non-discrimination laws, launched a formal
investigation into whether Labour had "unlawfully discriminated against,
harassed or victimized people because they are Jewish".
In its report, published in October 2020, the EHRC determined that the Labour party had indeed been "responsible for unlawful acts of harassment and discrimination". As a result, the party was legally obliged to draft an action plan, based on the EHRC recommendations, to remedy the unlawful aspects of its governance. The EHRC was required to monitor it and, if necessary, take action to enforce it. That is the current state of play.
Labour’s newly-elected
leader Keir Starmer, however, pledged as he was to extirpate antisemitism from
the party root and branch, refused to readmit him to the parliamentary Labour
party. So Corbyn is currently a
free-floating Member of Parliament.
It is no surprise that the
opinion that resulted in his suspension is held quite widely within the
left-wing of the party, and continues to bubble to the surface from time to
time. On July 20, 2021 Labour’s NEC, determined
to demonstrate that it is taking effective action against antisemitism, banned
four far-left factions known to support Corbyn.
All were accused of asserting that claims of antisemitism in the Labour
party were politically motivated, and of condoning inappropriate comments by
party members. The ruling was that
belonging to any of the four factions would be grounds for removal from the
party.
Along with the ban, and
in accordance with its EHRC obligations, Labour introduced a new process under
which complaints will in future be handled by a panel of independent lawyers
reporting to a new independent appeal board. In addition it announced that all
prospective Labour party candidates will henceforth have to be trained by the
Jewish Labour Movement about how to deal with antisemitism.
“We are acting
decisively to put our house in order,” said Anneliese Dodds, Labour party chair.
Keir Starmer’s
determined action against Corbyn, allied to his centre-left politics and his
somewhat lacklustre performance as leader, has alienated his hard left. On August 14 eminent British filmmaker, 85
year-old Ken Loach, announced on Twitter that he had been expelled from the
Labour party by “Starmer and his clique”.
“Labour HQ finally decided I'm not fit to be a member of their party,” he wrote, “as I will not disown those already expelled. Well, I am proud to stand with the good friends and comrades victimized by the purge. There is indeed a witch-hunt."
Left-wing activists,
including Corbyn and other sitting MPs, rushed to Loach’s defence, describing
him as Britain’s greatest living film-maker whose films “exposed the
inequalities in our society”. Loach has a
long history of condemning artists who perform in Israel, charging them with
supporting an “apartheid state”. He has allowed
his own films to be shown in Israeli cinemas.
Also under investigation
by Labour is Jenny Manson, the co-chair of Jewish Voice For Labour (JVL),
a group which has consistently sought to downplay allegations of
antisemitism under Corbyn, describing them as “exaggerated”. At the same time JVL is heavily involved in
another incident arising from Labour’s Jewish problem.
On July 10, 2019 the BBC Panorama programme investigated antisemitism in Corbyn’s Labour party. Seven former Labour staffers, responsible for investigating allegations of misconduct by party members, testified to a catalogue of efforts by party members and officials to subvert their work. The official Labour line, following the programme, was to denounce them as "disaffected former staff" with "personal and political axes" to grind, and to accuse journalist John Ware, who made the programme, of “deliberate and malicious representations designed to mislead the public.”
All of them sued the Labour
party for libel. Losing its case in the
High Court in July 2020, the party, authorized by Keir Starmer, issued an
unreserved apology for making "false and defamatory" comments about Ware
and the seven whistle-blowers, and agreed to pay substantial damages to them
all.
But JVL had voiced its
own denunciation of Ware on BBC radio the day after the Panorama programme was
transmitted. During the broadcast
interview Naomi Wimborne-Idrissi, JVL’s media officer, accused Ware of “a
terrible record” of Islamophobia and far-right politics, claiming he had previously
been disciplined and that the BBC had had to apologize. Ware sued JVL for libel.
Following the preliminary hearing on August 18, 2021 the judge ruled that there
was “no dispute” that the meaning of Wimborne-Idrissi’s words was defamatory. She ruled similarly in respect of a post by Wimborne-Idrissi
on the JVL website. Unless a settlement
is agreed, the case will now proceed to trial, where Wimborne-Idrissi will have
to try to prove that what she said was true.
The storm whipped up
during Corbyn’s time as Labour leader rumbles on. In its glory days during the mid-twentieth
century, Labour used to boast that it was “a broad church”, successfully
accommodating a wide range of political opinions. At
the time this meant that it was able to include extreme left-wing elements
within its ranks. The hard left has
always been a minority within the Labour party, and British political history
shows that whenever it gained a certain dominance, the result was electoral
disaster. With the antisemitism debacle
and its aftermath reducing any chance of winning power within the party to near
zero, the hard left must be considering the possibility of a formal break from
mainstream Labour. That would be a
totally unforeseen, but not universally unwelcome, fallout from the whole
unsavory antisemitism episode in the history of Britain’s Labour party.
Published in the Jerusalem Post on-line, 14 September 2021:
https://www.jpost.com/jerusalem-report/no-end-to-the-uk-labour-partys-jewish-problem-679395
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