Weekend Herald

The Tory who came to Jeremy Corbyn’s defence

Labour faces renewed claims of anti-Semitism in runup to election

- Jeremy Corbyn John Bercow

John Bercow, the British Parliament’s former Speaker, has come to Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn’s defence after claims of anti-Semitism in Labour’s ranks.

With Britain going to the polls on December 12, Corbyn’s bid for Britain’s top job has been sidetracke­d by renewed claims that he is not fit to be prime minister because of his perceived tolerance of anti-Semitic attitudes, an allegation Corbyn strongly denies.

The criticism came from a former member of the Labour Party’s inner circle who took the extraordin­ary step of urging British voters to choose Conservati­ve Prime Minister Boris Johnson, and from an influentia­l Jewish newspaper that urged Britons to shun Corbyn in the election.

But Bercow, who is Jewish, said during an interview for British GQ magazine: “I myself have never experience­d anti-Semitism from a member of the Labour Party, point one. And point two, though there is a big issue and it has to be addressed, I do not myself believe Jeremy Corbyn is anti-Semitic.” He added: “I’ve known him for the 22 years I’ve been in Parliament.

“Even actually when I was a rightwinge­r we got on pretty well,” Bercow said.

However, Ian Austin, a close aide to Gordon Brown, the Labour Party’s last Prime Minister, said the party has been poisoned by “anti-Jewish racism” under Corbyn. Austin was one of seven lawmakers who left the Labour Party in February because of allegation­s of anti-Semitism and its failure to take a clear stand on Brexit.

Yesterday he urged “decent, traditiona­l, patriotic Labour voters” to vote for Johnson and the Conservati­ves rather than let Corbyn take power. He said the “scandal of antiSemiti­sm” has poisoned Labour since Corbyn was elected party leader in 2015.

Those concerns were echoed by the Jewish Chronicle weekly newspaper, which said its polling indicated that nearly half of Britain’s Jews would “seriously consider” leaving the country if Corbyn becomes prime minister.

The 70-year-old Corbyn has long supported the cause of Palestinia­ns and much has been made of his use of the word friends when referring to the Hamas and Hizbollah groups at a parliament­ary meeting in 2009, something he said in 2016 he regretted. He has been accused of failing to expel party members who express anti-Semitic views, and has been criticised for past statements, including a 2010 speech in which he compared Israel’s blockade of the Gaza Strip to Nazi Germany’s sieges of Leningrad and Stalingrad during World War II.

Corbyn denied the allegation­s, saying yesterday that “anti-Semitism is a poison and an evil in our society” and that he was working to root it out of the Labour Party.

“Our party has confronted the issue, we have suspended or expelled members, we have an education programme and all of that has been set up since I became the leader of this party, and we’ll carry on doing exactly that,” he said.

“There are many Jewish people in this country who are members of the Labour Party, supporters of the Labour Party, work with the Labour Party and they do not share the views that have been put forward on the front page of the Jewish Chronicle,” Corbyn said.

The controvers­y erupted as Corbyn has been trying to focus attention on his party’s economic plans, based on a broad call for social justice and the restoratio­n of social services cut by the Conservati­ves since 2010.

Corbyn has been dogged by allegation­s of anti-Semitism since his spectacula­r rise from the obscurity of Labour’s back benches to the party’s top spot. He has moved Labour sharply to the left and away from the centre ground staked out by former Prime Minister Tony Blair, who led the party to three straight election triumphs.

A year before he took the party’s helm, he was widely criticised for attending a 2014 wreath-laying ceremony at a memorial in Tunisia honouring Palestinia­ns whom Israel has linked to the murders of 11 Israelis at the 1972 Munich Olympics.

On Thursday, the Jewish Chronicle took the unusual step of publishing a front-page editorial aimed at “nonJews” who would not normally read the paper. It said fears were raised when Corbyn became party leader but that some had hoped he would become more tolerant.

“The opposite has happened. The near-total inaction of Mr Corbyn and the rest of the Labour leadership in dealing with anti-Semites in the party has both emboldened them and encouraged others,” the newspaper said.

Senior Labour figures fought back against the allegation­s.

John McDonnell, Labour’s economy spokesman and a key Corbyn ally, said Labour was “saddened” by criticism in the Jewish media but added: “We’re doing everything they asked of us to address this issue.”

He accused Johnson and the Conservati­ves of racism but did not provide specifics.

“Voting for Boris Johnson, if you are a Labour voter and you want to protect your community, is absolutely absurd and it makes no sense at all,” said Rebecca Long-Bailey, Labour’s business spokeswoma­n.

In September, Opposition MPs clapped and cheered during Question Time when Labour backbenche­r Tanmanjeet Singh Dhesi, the Commons’ first turbaned Sikh MP, demanded Johnson apologise for comparing Muslim women to letterboxe­s and called for an inquiry into Islamophob­ia. In a Daily Telegraph column last year, Johnson said it was absolutely ridiculous that women should go around resembling letterboxe­s and bank robbers.

Johnson pushed hard for the early election, which is coming more than two years ahead of schedule, after Parliament thwarted his plans to have Britain leave the European Union on October 31. Johnson hopes to win an outright majority in Parliament so he can pass a divorce bill in time for

Britain to leave by the next Brexit deadline on January 31.

Until now, Brexit has been the main campaign issue, but Labour is trying to shift the debate on to domestic issues such as healthcare, the environmen­t and social welfare.

Bercow, the former House of Commons speaker who oversaw Britain’s bruising parliament­ary battles over Brexit, told the Associated Press that leaving the EU would be a historic mistake but added it’s not too late to reverse the decision.

Other parties competing in the December 12 election include the Liberal Democrats, who want to cancel Brexit; the Scottish National Party, which opposes Brexit and wants Scotland to leave the United Kingdom; and the Brexit Party, which says Britain should leave the bloc without a deal.

Three parties that want to stay in the EU — the Liberal Democrats, the Green party and the Welsh party Plaid Cymru — announced an agreement yesterday not to run against each other in dozens of seats in order to make it more likely that pro-EU candidates will prevail.

The arrangemen­t negotiated by the Unite to Remain group means there will be 60 election districts in which voters will have only one candidate who favours staying in the EU, which the group hopes will boost their chances.

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