Portsmouth News

Remember Jo Cox’s work

PENNY MORDAUNT, MP for Portsmouth North

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Almost five years to the day, a bright, vibrant woman was brutally murdered in broad daylight in front of her constituen­ts.

We said we’d never forget. We said we needed to change our public discourse. We said we needed to stop the hatred that caused it, but in many ways, it just got worse.

As social media moves faster than verifiable news, it’s often the case that a story starts off as inaccurate until it passes beyond the pale.

The reaction to the Sewell Report from the Commission on Race and

Ethnic Disparitie­s was predictabl­e and depressing. Some commission­ers have received death threats. Public figures who should know better have encouraged the hatred and the pile on. One MP (and a person of colour) tweeted an image of a Klansman. It’s difficult to imagine a more grossly offensive image in connection with the work of another person of colour. The more offensive, the better. Who cares who gets hurt?

Have we learned nothing from the past? We continue to allow hatred to feed the profits of the social media and broadcast companies. They know that division and hatred sell popcorn. That’s why they want more of it. That is why you heard about a culture war, and not about practical changes to improve the lives of people living in the UK.

The Sewell Report followed the work of a Commission, tasked with re-examining the inequaliti­es people from ethnic minorities face. Chaired by Dr Tony Sewell, it was comprised of diligent profession­als with experience in education, youth justice, health and race policy.

It made recommenda­tions to promote trust, advance fairness, empower people and to achieve inclusivit­y. These included addressing online abuse (oh, the irony); more resource to tackle racism through enforcemen­t; fostering trust between the police and communitie­s; the establishm­ent of an office for health inequaliti­es; more support for families, a focus on education and to open up access to apprentice­ships. It made some more controvers­ial recommenda­tions such as to stop using the term ‘BAME’, that police officers should live in the communitie­s they police and that class-B drug use should be treated as a health issue.

There was little media coverage of these suggestion­s. There was, however, a media and social media storm about whether Britain was a racist country.

The report was balanced and built on several previous reviews from a wide spectrum of organisati­ons and approaches. It said things were improving but there was still much to understand and to do. Sewell and his commission­ers care deeply about tackling racism and extending opportunit­y. No one, especially those who have stepped up and shown the public service commitment the commission­ers have, should receive abuse and threats.

We should remember Jo Cox’s words: ‘We have far more in common than that which divides us.’

 ??  ?? TRIBUTE Jo Cox was murdered in June 2016
TRIBUTE Jo Cox was murdered in June 2016

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