Starmer’s clean-up blueprint revealed
SIR KEIR Starmer is ready to step up his campaign against “morally repugnant” antisemitism within Labour because he is convinced he will not become Prime Minister without winning this fight, sources close to the leader have said.
The former Director of Public Prosecutions has already developed a plan for thoroughgoing changes to the party’s structure to deal with anti-Jewish racism, the JC can reveal.
Sir Keir will use the imminent publication of the Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) report into allegations of institutional antisemitism in Labour as a legal framework to force through major changes. “Sir Keir finds antisemitism morally repugnant — but he also wants to become Prime Minister,” said the source. “He has absolutely nothing to lose by aggressively trying to sort this mess out. Politically it will show him to be strong and it’s doing the right thing.” “Keir’s a realist,” said another senior party source. “He knows Labour cannot win an election with the stain of antisemitism still hanging over it.
“He will come straight out and say, ‘I am the leader of the Labour Party and I accept all the things this report says. It is a statutory body, so we have to accept it, and we are going to implement it all.’”
In a key development, the JC has learned that strategists connected to Sir Keir’s close-knit team are exploring plans for a special one-day party conference — to be held early next year — to deal specifically with the EHRC report.
Sir Keir told the JC in April of his decision to “begin work immediately” to establish an independent complaints process to deal with antisemitism and other disciplinary cases within his party.
If, as expected, the EHRC report recommends that Labour establish
an independent complaints process, it would have to be voted through at a party conference.
This year’s conference, which was planned for September, has been postponed because of the coronavirus pandemic. Discussions have already begun about staging the conference at venues such as the Birmingham NEC or even in the newly constructed Nightingale Hospital site in London.
But another source close to Sir Keir warned that the conference may backfire, telling the JC: “There is a real risk of any rule changes not being passed if you look at the current makeup of the party.”
Meanwhile, in move designed to help speed up the backlog in dealing with antisemitism complaints, a trusted ally of the Labour leader has already been moved into the party’s Southside headquarters in central London as a “management enforcer” to ensure that allegations of anti-Jewish racism are properly dealt with. The JC has agreed not to name the member of staff, who has worked closely with Sir Keir in the past.
Speaking to the JC last week, Sir Keir insisted he had “already taken steps” to try to tackle a backlog of over 130 outstanding complaints into alleged antisemitism from party members.
“Labour’s compliance unit is now being very closely managed,” a source said. “For anyone seeking to stay in their jobs it would not be sensible to disobey the new managers’ requests. The manager has also been given the power to step in and make decisions himself about cases if need be.”
In a further effort to speed up Labour’s disciplinary machine, Sir Keir has asked the National Executive Committee (NEC), which rules on what action to take over cases, to meet weekly rather than monthly as now.
The JC has reported on a string of new disciplinary cases, resignations and expulsions over antisemitism allegations in recent weeks. Although Sir Keir has a slim majority on the NEC, it is still packed with Corbynites. Huda
Elmi, a Constituency Labour Party representative, called for the EHRC to be scrapped after it announced it was investigating Labour. Darren Williams, another CLP rep on the NEC, has repeatedly denied antisemitism was a problem under Mr Corbyn.
But sources close to Sir Keir believe they can keep their majority in crucial decisions relating to anti-Jewish racism and the EHRC. They point to role of trade unions such as GMB on the NEC which are now solid supporters of “doing the right thing on antisemitism.”
They also point out the significance of Sir Keir’s ability to win the vote on his favoured candidate for the Labour General Secretary’s role, which was by no means certain in advance.
New General Secretary David Evans starts his later this month. As assistant general secretary of the party between 1999 and 2001 under Tony Blair, he played a leading role in Labour’s victory in the 2001 election.
A staunch opponent of hard-left politics, Mr Evans is also said to share Sir Keir’s belief that antisemitism must be stamped out of the party as quickly as possible if Labour is to be in a position to win the next election.
Mr Evans is also known to be a fierce critic of anti-Zionism, stretching back to his early days in politics at York University.
Meanwhile, the Jewish Labour Movement told Sir Keir last month that it would not undertake antisemitism training for Labour staff, as he had requested, while staff who had been central to the failure to deal with antisemitism under Mr Corbyn remained in their jobs. “It helped ram home to Sir Keir the urgency of what is needed to be done,” said a source.
But allies of Sir Keir believe that the party’s National Constitutional Committee – which has the power to expel members - still presents a problem, containing numerous pro-Corbyn figures.
Sources say Starmer will have a majority on NEC when it comes to antisemitism