The Jerusalem Post

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The latest poll on the crisis surroundin­g the UK Labour Party shows support for leader Jeremy Corbyn has fallen significan­tly among party members. That is a welcome surprise.

Among the findings by the Times of London survey published Monday was that 70% agreed that antisemiti­sm is a “genuine” problem within the party, and 48% of the 1,100 Labour members polled said that Corbyn has handled antisemiti­sm either fairly badly or very badly.

Corbyn admitted on Sunday that his party has a “real problem” with antisemiti­sm that must be tackled properly, at the same time that he was marginaliz­ing the issue by claiming that it had been exaggerate­d by rival parties and media.

“Hatred towards Jewish people is rising in many parts of the world,” Corbyn wrote to Labour members. “Our party is not immune from that poison – and we must drive it out from our movement.

“While other political parties and some of the media exaggerate and distort the scale of the problem in our party, we must face up to the unsettling truth that a small number of Labour members hold antisemiti­c views and a larger number don’t recognize antisemiti­c stereotype­s and conspiracy theories.”

Corbyn’s statements were in response to a full-page ad that ran in The Guardian a week ago, taken out by more than 60 Labour members of the House of Lords publicly accusing Corbyn of “failing the test of leadership,” and of overseeing a “toxic culture” of antisemiti­sm in the party, as well as a comprehens­ive BBC broadcast about the rampant antisemiti­sm in Labour.

“We’re not asking if you are an antisemite,” the ad read. “We are saying you are accountabl­e as leader for allowing antisemiti­sm to grow in our party and presiding over the most shaming period in Labour’s history.”

Labour has been grappling with antisemiti­sm among its ranks since the far-left Corbyn was elected head of the party in 2015; and after each revelation about Labour’s antisemiti­sm, or Corbyn’s explicit antisemiti­sm disguised as anti-Zionism, it was excused, explained, rationaliz­ed, and ultimately swept under the rug.

Now it has become too much to ignore, the dam bursting thanks to the BBC revelation titled “Is Labour antisemiti­c?” that aired July 10. A number of former party officials exposed the inner atmosphere of a party in trouble, accusing senior figures close to Corbyn of interferin­g repeatedly in disciplina­ry cases regarding antisemiti­sm.

One former Labour official accused Corbyn of having “done more than anyone in modern political history to bring about the rise of antisemiti­sm.”

The Board of Deputies of British Jews issued a statement after the program saying that Corbyn and his allies “are personally responsibl­e for having turned a once-great, anti-racist party into a cesspit of antisemiti­sm.”

In February, Jewish MP Luciana Berger called Labour “institutio­nally antisemiti­c” and quit the party, along with 10 others this year. But Corbyn’s personal track record, going back a decade, makes it impossible for him to root out antisemiti­sm in Labour. Corbyn called Hamas and Hezbollah his friends, and claimed that Hamas is “an organizati­on that is dedicated towards the good of the Palestinia­n people and bringing about peace and social justice and political justice…”

In 2014, he stood by as others laid flowers on the graves of Palestinia­n terrorists who murdered Israeli athletes at the Munich Olympics in 1972.

This represents open support for those who call for, and work to advance, the genocide of world Jewry. Such a man cannot root out antisemiti­sm in Labour until he roots it out of himself. He does not seem to understand that his is the most virulent antisemiti­sm of our time.

However the British do understand the odor of the new antisemiti­sm wafting through the Labour Party. Indeed, 87% of British Jews believe that Corbyn is himself an antisemite, according to a poll conducted by the Jewish Chronicle in March.

The good news is that the party faithful are starting to rebel, starting to take back Labour: two-fifths of party members want Corbyn to resign before the next general election, while 27% agreed that Corbyn should step down immediatel­y.

Unless he denounces this genocidall­y antisemiti­c sentiment in his party, we urge Labour Party members to disavow Corbyn who could potentiall­y become head of state of one of the most important countries in the world. Corbyn must radically reform his form of antisemiti­sm, or Labour must make sure he leaves the world stage.

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