The Jewish Chronicle

Whether or not to vote Labour: Linda Grant’s analysis reaches the wrong conclusion while

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In her eloquent and moderate article last week, Linda Grant explained why she still intends to vote Labour. As another long-standing supporter she has my sympathy. I am also a reader and admirer of her books. However, as a good author, she should be able to apply self criticism to all her writings. She writes of Jeremy Corbyn that she believes: “not that he’s antisemiti­c, but that antisemiti­sm doesn’t much matter to him.”

Surely it is exactly this downgradin­g of antisemiti­sm to a Grade B racism that is the very essence of the new antisemiti­sm? Jews are not to be provided the same protection­s as other minorities. Jews are labelled (pernicious in itself - as well as palpable nonsense regarding Israeli Jews in particular) as “white and privileged”. Therefore, abuse and oppression of Jews is of a lower order in the hierarchy of victimhood — perhaps the lowest. This view is widely held among the left today and is even espoused by left-leaning Jews of my acquaintan­ce.

I really want to vote Labour. Initially, I even considered Linda’s own position of voting on the basis of the local candidate.

Someone needs to properly challenge the Tory incumbents. But with this dangerous ideologica­l sophistry in ascendancy in the Party —- I simply cannot do it.

Jeremy Shotts,

London N20

So Linda Grant, despite never having been under any illusions about Jeremy Corbyn’s ability to lead the Labour Party” will be voting again for her Labour candidate, Catherine West, because “on the issues that matter to me”, they are on the same side. Not quite.

Catherine West was one of the 35 Labour MPs who nominated Corbyn as leader on 11 June 2015 and she was one of only 40 who supported him in the no-confidence vote on 28 June 2016, when 172 Labour MPs voted against him. Bruce A Fireman,

London N6

I agree with everything in Linda Grant’s article on why she is still voting Labour— except her conclusion that we should still vote Labour this time round.

As a lifelong Labour voter I find myself in the uncomforta­ble position for the first time of not feeling able to vote Labour. I am old enough to remember when Labour was infiltrate­d by Militant Tendency in the 1980s. The current Momentum/Corbyn situation feels very much the same sort of thing. Militant were only dealt with after Labour had suffered its most humiliatin­g defeat in the 1983 General Election and a further two electoral defeats.

I understand that it is a great shame that good Labour MPs such as Catherine West may lose their seats — but the only way Labour is going to be persuaded to deal with Momentum and its divisive leader is by suffering another humiliatin­g defeat, or several.

The loss of Labour seats such as Hornsey and Wood Green is the price the party will have to pay if it is going to learn its lesson (again) and regain its appeal to the centre ground.

Daniel Cameron,

Reading RG4

I am sure many among our community would welcome the Chairman of the Jewish Labour Movement as a member of parliament but I was incredulou­s to hear Mr Newmark chose to fight the Finchley and Golders Green seat in the forthcomin­g general election. Putting the Chairman of the JLM forward for the seat with the

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