The Jewish Chronicle

She is warm, friendly, and steely

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she became Home Secretary, carrying enormous national demands on her time. Not at all.

Even the most avid Labour voters acknowledg­e her work-rate and the fact that, despite the heights to which she has risen, she continues to play an active role in local life. One area in which she has been particular­ly visible is interfaith work. Mrs May regularly attends not just annual meetings of the local group that unites our diverse religious make-up, but many of those during the rest of the year.

She has also come to the synagogue whenever we have had special events, and was a regular visitor to the late Sir Nicholas Winton and a prominent supporter of the campaign to honour his memory.

Among the Jewish community, there are those who disagreed with her policies on immigratio­n and, conscious of their own history, feel we should have a more open-door policy.

However, there are an equal number of admirers, who feel that welcome must be tempered with limitation­s.

There is a grudging respect from neutrals who recognise that Mrs May does not flinch from taking on hard tasks. We locals are fairly sure, for instance, that the Heathrow issue would not have dragged on interminab­ly if it had been under her watch.

At the last two general elections, I was asked to chair the hustings between all the Maidenhead candidates — the fact that it was a rabbi doing so says much about the role of Jews in local life — and it was noticeable how she attacked her opponents’ policies but never the person.

There is every hope that, as Prime Minister, she will raise the tone of Parliament­ary debate and make it more about substance, less about pointscori­ng.

Like every politician, Mrs May has her backers and detractors, but if she acts as conscienti­ously at Number 10 as she does as a local MP, her premiershi­p will be far more preferable than any alternativ­e option.

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PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES
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