Brown warns of battle for Labour’s soul
Former prime minister says Jeremy Corbyn has just days to remove the stain from his party
Labour is fighting for its soul over anti-semitism, Gordon Brown said yesterday, as he warned Jeremy Corbyn that he had just days to remove the “stain” from the party. The former prime minister told an audience “we cannot stand up for the rights of some of the people, some of the time”. He said Labour must “unanimously” accept the international definition of antisemitism when the National Executive Committee votes on it tomorrow.
LABOUR is fighting for its soul over anti-semitism, Gordon Brown said yesterday, as he warned Jeremy Corbyn that he had just days to remove the “stain” from the party.
The former Labour prime minister said that the party must take action “immediately” to right the “hurt” that it has caused the Jewish community.
He added that Labour must “unanimously and unequivocally” accept the international definition of anti-semitism when the national executive committee (NEC) votes on it tomorrow.
Tom Watson, Labour’s deputy leader, has signed a petition for the party to adopt the international definition “in full and without delay”.
Mr Watson announced a new campaign called No Space for Hate and praised Mr Brown’s “impassioned” speech at a conference organised by the Jewish Labour Movement.
Dame Margaret Hodge, a senior Jewish MP, said that Mr Corbyn could not resolve the issue of anti-semitism because he “is the problem”. At least three Labour MPS are considering following Frank Field and resigning the party whip if the NEC fails to adopt the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance definition of anti-semitism.
John Mcdonnell, the shadow chancellor, has indicated Labour could adopt the international definition then decide on potential caveats at a later date in an effort to defuse the row.
Mr Brown told the conference yesterday: “This is not a theoretical and abstract problem we are dealing with. It is about the soul of the Labour Party. We cannot stand up for the rights of some of the people, some of the time. We have to stand up for all of the people all of the time. This stain had got to be removed. The hurt it has done has got to be undone immediately and within the next few days.”
He warned that amending the international definition would “destroy the unity” that is essential to fighting antisemitism.
“The Labour Party has been the last line of defence for people facing persecution and discrimination,” he said. “The last line of defence must never become the front line of the problem.”
Lord Sacks, a former chief rabbi, last week accused Mr Corbyn of being antisemitic and compared comments he made before he was leader to Enoch Powell’s “Rivers of Blood” speech.
Yesterday, he told BBC One’s The Andrew Marr Show: “Jews have been in Britain since 1656, I know of no other occasion in these 362 years where the majority of our community are asking is this country safe to bring up our children. It is very, very worrying.
“When people hear the kind of language coming out of Labour, that has been brought to the surface in Jeremy Corbyn’s earlier speeches, they cannot but feel an existential threat.”
Meanwhile, Momentum, the grassroots group that backs Mr Corbyn, will today call for all Labour MPS to face mandatory re-selections ahead of a general election.
The plans will be seen as an effort to purge moderate MPS from the party.
Mr Watson said he launched the No Space for Hate campaign because he was “increasingly disappointed at the tone of political discourse on social media”. He added: “There is something quite rotten in the abusive language and personal attacks.”
‘Labour has been the last line of defence for people facing persecution. The last line of defence must never become the front line of the problem’