The Jewish Chronicle

Community’sgreen lightforAm­berRudd

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THE APPEARANCE of Amber Rudd, the lowprofile new Home Secretary, at a Jewish charity dinner on Monday included a series of incidents which struck me as both utterly remarkable, and completely predictabl­e at the same time.

It made for a fascinatin­g and peculiar evening. Ms Rudd, who has only been an MP for six years, is virtually unknown in the community and has almost no experience whatsoever of engaging with the establishe­d organisati­ons and charities of British Jewry.

On arrival at the Guildhall in central London she was visibly nervous. The early part of her speech — which was still being written by her special adviser as the dinner started — was as formulaic and predictabl­e as could be.

At first the guests listened in silence. But Ms Rudd warmed to her task, and the diners responded. After a few ripples of applause following paragraphs on combating antisemiti­sm and supporting Israel, she stepped down from the podium and received a standing ovation.

“She speaks very well,” the chap next to me exclaimed as I pondered how many politician­s I must have heard trotting out pre-prepared, standardis­ed lines about working towards a two-state solution in the Middle East or deriding hatred of Jews over the years.

I subsequent­ly raised my eyebrows as those around me raised their glasses in Ms Rudd’s direction. Clearly it does not take Churchilli­an prose or a barnstormi­ng appeal to get dinner guests out of their seats these days.

But speaking to me after her address, Ms Rudd was warm, affable, and clearly very intent on developing a rapport with the community. She has big shoes to fill following six years of Mrs May’s cordiality while at the Home Office.

We have been blessed in the past few years to have the government’s big beasts — David Cameron, Mrs May, Michael Gove and Boris Johnson spring to mind — regularly touring the Jewish after-dinner circuit and leaving donors eating not just off the fine china, but out of their hands.

With the arrival of the Prime Minister’s new ministers we begin the relationsh­ip-building cycle again. Many cabinet figures, like Ms Rudd, start from a low base. But if this opening gambit is anything to go by, they could be heading in the right direction.

It does not take Churchilli­an prose to get guests out of their seats

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