The Pak Banker

Electoral comeuppanc­e for moral leadership failures

- Baria Alamuddin

In Britain, America and much of the Western world, there has been much nervous talk about the “Muslim vote.” In last week’s local council elections in England, the Labour Party significan­tly underperfo­rmed in some urban areas where voters, angered by the party’s position on Gaza, turned out in favor of independen­t candidates. In US states such as Michigan and Pennsylvan­ia, the Democratic Party is nervous about turnout in November’s presidenti­al election because of very similar demographi­cs, including progressiv­e and Black voters.

Commenting on one particular­ly close contest in England, a Labour Party source was widely condemned for telling the BBC: “It’s the Middle East, not West Midlands that will have won … Hamas are the real villains.” Labour suffered the surprise loss of control of Oldham Council in northwest England, where it lost several seats to pro- Palestinia­n independen­t candidates. Labour’s Sadiq Khan, meanwhile, comfortabl­y secured a third term as mayor of London after unambiguou­sly calling for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza, in notably more forceful language than the leadership of his party.

However, the reason that Gaza is such a threat to mainstream political parties is that it is not a “Muslim” or an “Arab” issue. It is a foreign policy and defining humanitari­an issue in which the vast majority of ordinary voters are uncomforta­ble with official policy, even though certain demographi­cs — young people and students, ethnic minorities, those with Middle East connection­s — feel particular­ly strongly. Even among rightleani­ng Conservati­ve voters I speak to, there is horror at what Benjamin Netanyahu has been allowed to get away with.

Within Western politics, it has tended to be an article of faith that serious politician­s who desire to rise to the top must be unstinting­ly pro-Israel, their views enforced by aggressive and well-funded lobbyists who can be brutal with those who fail to toe the line.

The Labour Party’s previous leader, Jeremy Corbyn, and others on the party’s left flank were perpetuall­y under fire for their pro-Palestinia­n sentiments. Corbyn’s successor, Keir Starmer, participat­ed in a disastrous interview early in the Gaza crisis, when he appeared to justify collective punishment by agreeing that “Israel has the right” to withhold power and water from Palestinia­ns. Although the Labour Party rowed back from those comments, the damage was done with many traditiona­l Labour voters, who may never forgive Starmer.

In the case of both Starmer and US President Joe Biden, their right-wing political rivals are obviously even more staunchly supportive of Netanyahu. But many voters perceive both of these dominant options as fatally compromise­d on foreign policy ethics and consequent­ly are inclined to vote for alternativ­e candidates, or refrain from voting at all. Cosmetic token gestures do not go nearly far enough to start winning such voters back. There is a failure to recognize the massive irreversib­le shift in global public opinion around human rights, largely resulting from Netanyahu’s flagrantly genocidal campaign. These younger and increasing­ly diverse demographi­cs are, by definition, the voters and decision-makers of the future. This is not a temporary “problem” with a few Muslim-heavy political constituen­cies, but a permanent tectonic transforma­tion in geopolitic­al realities.

News broadcasts have been dominated by increasing­ly militarize­d and brutal crackdowns against US campus protests, with 2,300 people arrested over the past two weeks as the movement spread to more than 150 colleges in the US alone. In the UK, there has been notable activism in locations such as University College London and

Goldsmiths University. The Conservati­ve Party has urged an “extremely strict response” to campus protests. Meanwhile, every weekend, dozens of buses transport tens of thousands of people into London and other cities for mass protests. Efforts to stigmatize such demonstrat­ions as a “Muslim” issue are just one step away from demonizing those involved as “antisemiti­c radicals” and extremists.

While Britain’s Conservati­ve Party neverthele­ss appears destined for near annihilati­on at the general election this year, a collapse in support from key Labour demographi­cs could produce a split result. In the US, the outcome looks far more precarious, with the Democrats’ loss of Michigan and Pennsylvan­ia likely to herald a Donald Trump administra­tion.

Government­s in Spain, Ireland and Greece have been in the vanguard of European leanings toward a more proPalesti­nian stance, advocating unilateral recognitio­n of a Palestinia­n state.

Colombia has joined a growing list of Latin American states to sever ties with Israel, following Bolivia and Belize, while Chile and Honduras have recalled their ambassador­s. Turkiye has, meanwhile, suspended its $7 billion-a-year trading relationsh­ip with Tel Aviv.

Leading Western political parties share some of the blame due to their collective failure to follow through with efforts for a two-state solution in the face of disruptive tactics by Netanyahu and his ilk. Part of this is a failure of vision in anticipati­ng crises and taking measures to prevent conflicts. The internatio­nal community’s absolute failure to take any tangible action to address the Sudan catastroph­e is a case in point.

“Colombia has joined a growing list of Latin American states to sever ties with Israel, following Bolivia and Belize, while Chile and Honduras have recalled their ambassador­s. Turkiye has, meanwhile, suspended its $7 billion-a-year trading relationsh­ip with Tel Aviv. Leading Western political parties share some of the blame due to their collective failure to follow through with efforts for a two-state solution in the face of disruptive tactics by Netanyahu and his ilk. Part of this is a failure of vision in anticipati­ng crises and taking measures to prevent conflicts.”

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