Labour leader demotes MP over antisemitic article
UK Labour leader Keir Starmer fired his party’s shadow education secretary on Thursday after she shared an article with an “antisemitic conspiracy theory” in it.
MP Rebecca Long-Bailey retweeted an interview with actress and anti-capitalism activist Maxine Peake in The Independent in which she accused
Israel of training US police in the methods that resulted in the killing of George Floyd.
Regarding the article, Long-Bailey wrote on twitter that Peake “is an absolute diamond.”
“Systemic racism is a global issue,” Peake said. “The tactics used by the police in America, kneeling on George Floyd’s neck, that was learnt from seminars with Israeli secret services.”
Floyd’s death by a Minneapolis police officer who kneeled on his neck for nearly nine minutes has sparked major protests across the US and the world against racism and police brutality.
Israel Police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld was quoted in the article as saying, “There is no tactic or protocol that calls to put pressure on the neck or airway.”
Following an uproar and a call from the Board of Deputies of British Jews for her to apologize, Long-Bailey said she shared the article because of Peake’s “significant achievements and because the thrust of her argument is to stay in the Labour Party. It wasn’t intended to be an endorsement of all aspects of the article.”
However, Starmer said, “The sharing of that article was wrong.”
“The article contained antisemitic conspiracy theories, and I have therefore stood Rebecca Long-Bailey down from the shadow cabinet,” he said.
Starmer replaced Jeremy Corbyn as Labour leader in April. Corbyn has made antisemitic remarks and participated in events honoring antisemites, such as laying a wreath on the graves of the terrorists who tortured and killed Israeli athletes at the 1972 Munich Olympics.
“I’ve made it my first priority to tackle antisemitism, and rebuilding trust with the Jewish community is a No. 1 priority for me,” Starmer said.
Board of Deputies president Marie van der Zyl thanked Starmer for taking swift action on the matter.
“After Rebecca Long-Bailey shared a conspiracy theory, we and others gave her the opportunity to retract and apologize,” she said. “To our surprise and dismay, her response was pathetic. Her position as shadow education secretary was therefore untenable.
“There can be no space for this sort of action in any party, and it is right that after so many challenging years, Labour is now making this clear under its new leader,” van der Zyl said.