Sunday Mirror (Northern Ireland)

Intoleranc­e runs too deep in blood of divisive Tories BY JOHN McD0NNELL Labour Shadow Chancellor

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INFLAMMATO­RY Powell warned of ‘rivers of blood’ BORIS Johnson’s inflammato­ry comparison of Muslim women wearing burkas to “letter boxes” and “bank robbers” represents a strain of opinion in the Tory party dating back well over half a century.

Despite Theresa May’s protestati­ons that she takes a tough personal line on racism, she has failed to take action and couldn’t even bring herself to say the word “Islamophob­ia” in response to the former Foreign Secretary’s obviously Islamophob­ic newspaper column.

Johnson’s remarks, and support from acolytes such as Andrew Bridgen, Nadine Dorries and Ben Bradley, prove that intolerant opinion has a strong hold to this day in the Tory party.

Both Jeremy Corbyn and I have made clear that racism and anti-semitism have no place in the Labour Party.

Labour will resolve any outstandin­g issues within our party and get out there to assist the Jewish community in fighting anti-semitism and racism.

However, Boris Johnson’s remarks show how endemic intoleranc­e is within the Tory party.

It’s a strand of Tory opinion that in 1990 saw former party chairman

Norman Tebbit, one of Thatcher’s closest Cabinet allies in the 1980s, invent the divisive so-called “cricket test.”

He suggested UK citizens with roots in the Caribbean or Asia were somehow being disloyal to Britain by cheering on the West Indies, Pakistan or India in test match cricket clashes with England.

“A large proportion of Britain’s Asian population fail to pass the cricket test. Which side do they cheer for? It’s an interestin­g test. Are you still harking back to where you came from or where you are?” asked Tebbit – then still a Tory MP and later to be handed a seat in the House of Lords by John Major’s government.

Tebbit’s remarks probably sit in the same league as those from Johnson in terms of the

CRICKET TEST offence caused, revealing a perception some may have of what many in the Tory party really think about ethnic minorities, but rarely say in public.

There are much more extreme examples of Tory racism rows. Probably the most notorious was the 1968 antiimmigr­ation “Rivers of Blood” speech by former Tory minister Enoch Powell.

He talked about how in “20 years’ time the black man will have the whip hand over the white man”, and prophesied “the River Tiber foaming with much blood” – using language that is about as inflammato­ry as it’s possible to get.

In another notorious case, Peter Griffiths won Smethwick in the West Midlands for the Tories at the 1964 general election, with a campaign that included literature containing the sickening slogan, “If you want a n ***** for a neighbour, vote Labour”. Griffiths was a Tory MP as recently as 1997.

It’s also worth highlighti­ng Johnson’s own track record, referring a decade ago to black people as “piccaninni­es” and talking of “watermelon smiles”.

Regardless of any attempt by the Tory leadership to dampen down the party’s latest race row, Labour will lead the resistance against all intoleranc­e – whether it comes from former Foreign Secretary and London Mayor Johnson, far right activist Tommy Robinson, or the far right thugs who recently attacked the Socialist bookshop, Bookmarks.

Last week, in the wake of those onslaughts, I called for a revival of the spirit of an Anti-Nazi League cultural and political campaign to resist all forms of racism and fascism.

As deputy leader of the Greater London Council in the early 1980s, I was part of an authority that pioneered a firm anti-racist, equal opportunit­ies policy programme in the face of intoleranc­e from Thatcher’s government.

Labour stands ready once again to take up the fight against attempts to stir up racial division – in whatever guise that

appears.

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