The Jerusalem Post

Labour pains

BBC ex poses‘ institutio­nalized racist party’

- ANALYSIS • By HANNAH GAL

The British Labour Party has declared war on the BBC. The trigger was a probe by the BBC’s Panorama program into antisemiti­sm within Labour Party ranks titled “Is Labour Antisemiti­c?”

In the flagship BBC program aired last week, eight whistleblo­wers – some breaking a non-disclosure agreement to tell their story – accused Labour senior officials of interferin­g with the party’s antisemiti­sm investigat­ions and grossly misleading the public about their handling of mounting complaints.

The former staffers gave harrowing accounts of an “institutio­nally racist” party in which Jewish members were subjected to abuse. One interviewe­e said it was “self-destroying to be a member of the Labour Party and Jewish.”

They spoke of a complaints department team so undermined by party leader Jeremy Corbyn’s aides that its members suffered mental breakdowns, with one contemplat­ing suicide.

Labour’s attempts to stop the show from being broadcast proved futile. Not only did Labour’s antisemiti­sm make the headlines yet again, but just one day before the screening, distinguis­hed peers announced their resignatio­n from the party: former health minister Lord Darzi, former general secretary Lord Triesman, and former Royal College of Physicians president Lord Turnberg.

Echoing the sentiments of a growing number of disillusio­ned Labourites, the three accused Corbyn of heading a party that is “very plainly institutio­nally antisemiti­c.”

Corbyn’s alleged antisemiti­sm is nothing new. It has been at the top of the UK news agenda for the past three years. The party leader is also being investigat­ed by the Equalities and Human Rights Commission. So why did the Panorama probe ruffle Labour’s feathers and cause such an uproar?

“The charade of Mr Corbyn as an anti-racist activist has been blown apart,” explained Campaign Against Antisemiti­sm’s chief executive Gideon Falter.

The former staffers “have been compelled by their conscience to speak out,” added Falter. “Whilst claiming to act against Jew-hatred, Jeremy Corbyn’s agents and allies have carefully protected antisemite­s.”

At the heart of the program’s revelation­s is the party’s complaints process, which instead of being independen­t, was in fact meddled with by Corbyn’s general secretary Jennie Formby, chief of staff Karie Murphy, director of strategy Seumas Milne, and adviser Andrew Murray.

Meddling was intended to let antisemite­s off with the lightest possible punishment, often overriding complaint team’s recommenda­tions and dismissing their investigat­ions.

“It’s a joke,” former investigat­or Dan Hogan told Panorama. “On a number of the cases... the people that she [Formby] brought in when she became general secretary overruled us and downgraded what should have been a suspension to just an investigat­ion, or worse, just a reminder of conduct which is effectivel­y a slap on the wrist.”

The top aids, it was revealed, have gone to great lengths to achieve their goal. There was a 2018 email from Milne urging a review of the disciplina­ry process into antisemiti­c complaints. “Something’s going wrong, and we’re muddling up political disputes with racism... I think going forward we need to review where and how we’re drawing the line.”

To former head of disputes Sam Matthews, Milne’s message said that Corbyn’s office wanted direct involvemen­t with the disciplina­ry process.

In another 2018 email chain, Formby is seen as allegedly attempting to interfere with the selection of the panel for the case of accused member Jackie Walker. “The NCC cannot be allowed to continue in the way that they are at the moment,” reads Formby’s email, “and I will also be challengin­g the panel for the Jackie Walker case.”

The email was copied to Corbyn’s personal email as well as Milne’s and Corbyn’s chief of staff Karie Murphy.

Formby later addressed the same group to say, “I’ve permanentl­y deleted all trace of the email. Too many eyes all on my Labour address. Please use my Unite address.”

LABOUR HAS since told Panorama that Formby stopped using her party email because of concerns over a political opponent having access to it. However, outraged former Labour general secretary Ian McNicol is not convinced. “The issues that are raised within these emails should ring alarm bells across the party,” McNicol told Panorama. “To try to interfere politicall­y within the NCC is just wrong.”

The leader office’s heavy interventi­on has allegedly extended to high-profile cases such as those involving Marc Wadsworth, Ken Livingston­e, Jackie Walker, Glyn Secker and Moshe Machover, as well as the case of an antisemiti­c mural whose painter was famously supported by Corbyn. All the while Labour reassuranc­es were given out to the media and public that these accusation­s were being seriously and independen­tly investigat­ed.

For Matthews and his fellow whistle blowers, Corbyn’s Labour has normalized modern antisemiti­sm. The team members grew increasing­ly frustrated in light of Corbyn’s public claims about the party’s disciplina­ry process being free of political interferen­ce, and by Formby taking pride in improved complaints procedures since becoming general secretary.

It became clear that this was a party concerned with public relations and damage control rather than investigat­ing complaints and getting to the root of the growing problem. Labour’s former head of the disputes team, Mike Creighton, told Panorama of a 2016 conversati­on with Milne, who sought advice about how the party should deal with antisemiti­sm.

Creighton advised speeding up the handling of top-level antisemiti­c cases and for Corbyn “to make a significan­t speech on the issue of the Middle East, particular­ly saying that Israel had a right to exist.”

Milne is alleged to have laughed at the advice, leading Creighton to the conclusion that what Milne was seeking was not a way to deal with antisemiti­sm, but a means to handle “the bad publicity we’re getting.”

The damning program has cemented the perception of what MK Yair Lapid called “Corbyn’s problem with Jews.”

“Is Labour Antisemiti­c?” has lifted the lid off a culture where Jew-hatred is so deeply ingrained it is accepted as normal. After the Jewish community’s “Enough Is Enough” London demonstrat­ion, for example, Formby did not dig deep into the community’s pain or the causes of Labour’s antisemiti­sm, but instead allegedly described the Board of Deputies and the Jewish Leadership Council as “some of the rudest people” she ever met.

“To people like Jennie,” Matthews told The Jewish Chronicle, “the leader is without any faults. It really is like a cult.”

Panorama’s investigat­ion, as predicted, made the front pages of the national press, including The Guardian, The Times, The Daily Telegraph and Daily Mail, among others.

Its aftermath saw Labour drawing fierce criticism from politician­s far and wide, including current candidate for PM Jeremy Hunt, who on Twitter described Corbyn as “a man either willfully blind to antisemiti­sm or [who is] antisemiti­c himself,” condemning the Labour leader for “allowing this cancer to infiltrate our politics.”

Most illuminati­ng, however, was the feedback from disillusio­ned Labour Party members. “Whatever the truth or lies,” tweeted one alarmed supporter, “this is a continuing gaping wound. This is not going away and [is] losing votes.” Another wrote, “The perception is out there. It’s damaging, and a strong party would have sorted it. Why hasn’t Labour? That’s the question.”

It is unfortunat­e that the BBC did not take this golden opportunit­y to dig deep into the very causes of Labour’s antisemiti­sm and the reasons for the increase in antisemiti­c complaints since Corbyn became leader. An in-depth examinatio­n of the causes and nature of antisemiti­sm in general would have been helpful, whereas a considered look at the recent rise in antisemiti­sm worldwide is long overdue.

Panorama’s probe prompted fresh pressure on Corbyn to resign, with betting bookies reporting a “huge number of bets” on the Labour leader departing this year.

Whether Corbyn does resign or hangs on to his post, Panorama has undoubtedl­y burst his “peace activist” bubble, and cemented the perception of the Labour leader as antisemiti­c. Should he resign in the days to come, antisemiti­sm would rather ironically prove to be Corbyn’s downfall.

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 ?? (Toby Melville/Reuters) ?? LABOUR PARTY leader Jeremy Corbyn speaks in Kent, Britain, in May.
(Toby Melville/Reuters) LABOUR PARTY leader Jeremy Corbyn speaks in Kent, Britain, in May.

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