The National - News

Islamophob­ia raising its ugly head in Britain? Must be close to elections

- HA HELLYER Dr HA Hellyer is nonresiden­t scholar at the Carnegie Endowment for Internatio­nal Peace and a senior associate fellow at the Royal United Services Institute for Defence and Security Studies

Resolving a problem usually involves first admitting its existence. To deny a problem is a renunciati­on of responsibi­lity – refusing to name it is quite another.

When it comes to the problem of Islamophob­ia, that type of rejectioni­sm has been witnessed at the highest levels of Britain’s political elite over the past week. The price for this has been seen in the recent appearance of three men in a London court on terrorism charges, accused of identifyin­g an Islamic education centre in Leeds as a target for far-right violence. UK politician­s must take this seriously.

There ought not to be any surprise about the denial concerning Islamophob­ia in Britain. The real surprise is only why anybody is surprised. The deputy chairman of the Conservati­ve party, Lee Anderson, declared in late February that “Islamists” had “got control” of London, as well as the city’s Mayor, Sadiq Khan. The former Conservati­ve home secretary, Suella Braverman, has claimed that “Islamists … are in charge”, while former Conservati­ve prime minster Liz Truss has asserted that a “radical jihadist party” could soon send someone to Parliament.

This kind of rhetoric is not new for the current Conservati­ve party, even though it might shock those who would prefer to remember a different kind of Tory, such as Dominic Grieve or Kenneth Clarke. This is the reality that perhaps many of us would rather not face, but the party has allowed such rhetoric to spread within it for many years. Baroness Sayeeda Warsi, who was co-chairwoman of the party in 2011, drew attention to it famously when she claimed that prejudice towards Muslims had “passed the dinner-table test” and thus become socially acceptable.

More than a decade later, the situation seems to have become worse, but we are mistaken if we see this as separate from wider engagement­s within the party, as well as within British politics more generally.

On the contrary, there is a broader trend in UK politics, and in the Conservati­ve party in particular, that has identified its future as speaking to a base driven by populism, instead of engaging in political leadership. The Brexit vote in 2016 pointed to a major schism in this regard.

Few political figures within the Conservati­ve party thought that Brexit would happen but saw that expressing support for it would develop into political currency. Hence the famous example of former British prime minister Boris Johnson, who led the pro-Brexit campaign, but was clearly shocked when it actually happened. Neverthele­ss, the lesson was learnt: there were political points to be scored by aligning with the basest instincts of populist supporters, irrespecti­ve of the damage that might be wreaked upon the country.

In the political turmoil that ensued, dozens of Conservati­ve MPs were forced to leave the party because they refused to go along with the leadership populism that took over amid the Brexit referendum. At the time, some Downing Street insiders expressed glee at their departure because their view of Britain’s electorate was that it was breaking down into “Remainers” and “Leavers” – therefore, losing prominent centrists meant the party becoming more attractive to the Leavers who were more important to the Tories’ electoral ambitions.

We’ve seen much of that kind of populist tacking over recent years, and the recent Islamophob­ic outbursts are a part of that. The populism of increasing sections of the Conservati­ve base is connected to a broad sentiment of suspicion regarding Muslim communitie­s, and that has reared its head many times over the past decade.

None of that is clearer than in recent months, with the fallout from Israel’s war on Gaza playing out on Britain’s streets. The populism of the far right, with its deep connection to Islamophob­ia, white supremacy and anti-Muslim bigotry, has lined up behind Israel’s bombardmen­t of a largely Muslim and non-white population. But instead of condemning that trend, much of the Conservati­ve leadership has focused on demonising pro-Palestinia­n protesters instead.

When confronted with these recent outbursts, Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and many other senior Conservati­ve figures refused to acknowledg­e that these were direct expression­s of Islamophob­ia. Mr Anderson was suspended from the party, so there was a recognitio­n that something wrong had been said, but there was no public acknowledg­ment that his speech was Islamophob­ic. It was striking to see Conservati­ve figures, including Mr Sunak himself, admit that Mr Anderson’s comments were “wrong” but refuse to say why they were wrong. In the case of Ms Truss or Ms Braverman, there was not even any condemnati­on.

The UK is heading into an election cycle later this year. Research shows that this kind of populist bigotry increases when political campaignin­g is at its peak. Britons need to see examples of leadership, and not simply examples of politician­s pandering to their supporters’ baser instincts.

To do otherwise comes with a significan­t cost. The security services managed to foil this recent terrorist plot against the Muslim community. But with so many politician­s providing the mood music for such extremism, we may have a lot more to deal with before we know it.

It could reach dangerous levels, with some politician­s providing mood music for anti-Muslim extremism

 ?? AFP ?? Ms Braverman was a controvers­ial figure in Mr Sunak’s team
AFP Ms Braverman was a controvers­ial figure in Mr Sunak’s team
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