The Jewish Chronicle

New row over activist who quoted Heydrich

- BY LEE HARPIN

THE EXPULSION from the Labour Party of a veteran anti-Zionist academic has sparked a bitter new row over antisemiti­sm within the party.

Leading anti-Zionist activists have used the decision to expel retired professor Moshe Machover, who was born in Tel Aviv, as a rallying cry for claims that allegation­s of antisemiti­sm against him and others are false.

Mr Machover was told to he was no longer a party member after the publicatio­n of his article, “Anti-Zionism does not equal anti-Semitism”, by the Weekly Worker, the newspaper of the Communist Party of Great Britain (CPGB)

At a meeting on Wednesday night of Hampstead and Kilburn branch of the Labour Party, of which Mr Machover was a member, three motions condemning his expulsion were heard, including claims that it had set a “frightenin­g precedent” for a party fighting the “oppression of the Palestinia­n people”.

Around 20 anti-Zionist activists attended the session and there was a call for calm before the debate started. There was loud applause when one delegate, who said she was Israeli-born, called Mr Machover’s expulsion “ludicrous”.

The motions also called for the activist’s immediate reinstatem­ent and claimed he was a victim of the Internatio­nal Holocaust Remembranc­e Alliance definition of antisemiti­sm which, it was argued, could be used to “stifle free expression and criticism of Israeli policies”.

In a further motion heard at a meeting of the Hove and Portslade branch, it was claimed that Mr Machover’s article — which quoted Reinhard Heydrich, one of Hitler’s most notorious lieutenant­s, who suggested in 1935 that the early Nazi government agreed with Zionist ideals — represente­d a “scholarly critique of Zionism as a political ideology”.

A letter published in the Guardian last week, signed by 139 Labour Party members, including Ken Loach, Brian Eno and Sir Geoffrey Bindman, stated that the “charge of antisemiti­sm against Machover is personally offensive and politicall­y dangerous”.

Labour said Mr Machover was in contravent­ion of party rules due to his involvemen­t in “both Labour Party Marxists and the Communist Party of Great Britain” which left him “ineligible to remain a member of the Labour Party”.

Mr Machover claimed he was never a member of either group and cited the fact that many senior Labour MPs write and speak for outside publicatio­ns.

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