The Jewish Chronicle

Jeremy Corbyn did not empathise with ‘prosperous’ Jews, suggests ex-adviser

- BY ALEKS PHILLIPS

V A FORMER adviser to Jeremy Corbyn has said that the former Labour leader struggled to empathise with Jews because they are “relatively prosperous”.

Andrew Murray, a Unite official who was seconded to Mr Corbyn, is quoted in a new book being serialised in The Times, adding that Mr Corbyn “would have had massive empathy with the Jewish community in Britain in the 1930s and he would have been there at Cable Street, there’s no question. But, of course, the Jewish community today is relatively prosperous.”

Left Out: the Inside Story of Labour Under Corbyn by Gabriel Pogrund and Patrick Maguire also details how a multitude of suggestion­s were floated between Mr Corbyn and his close advisers on how to mend ties with the Jewish community — but only one was ever acted on.

In an effort to “reclaim an overwhelmi­ngly hostile narrative”, Mr

Battles with colleagues: Corbyn

Corbyn’s then chief of staff Karie Murphy is said to have drawn up a list of suggestion­s that might help to “soothe the nerves” of the Jewish community about the Labour leader.

The book says: “Some of Murphy’s suggestion­s were mundane: a round-table summit with community organisati­ons, a series of meetings with Jewish Labour activists and MPs, outreach to Jewish communitie­s outside of London, and a new strategy for rebutting stories in the media. Others were more striking. Corbyn would visit Auschwitz. He could meet children at London’s Jewish Free School. Haaretz, Israel’s liberal broadsheet, would get a set-piece interview. Congregant­s at a progressiv­e synagogue and residents of a Jewish care home would get to mix with Corbyn too.” However, all but one of those suggestion­s came to naught. Labour’s code of conduct was amended to “comprehens­ively rule out all forms of prejudice”.

The book also claims Mr Corbyn deferred to a circle of left wing Jewish Islington friends who formed a “kitchen cabinet” to help him make decisions on how to deal

Attempt to defend former Labour leader: trade unionist Andrew Murray

with the party’s antisemiti­sm crisis. “To them, the communal organisati­ons demanding the adoption of full IHRA [Internatio­nal Holocaust Remembranc­e Alliance definition of antisemiti­sm] — like the Board of Deputies — were firmly of the right, and therefore too unrepresen­tative to dictate policy in the community’s

name,” the book says.

The extract also recounts how a party investigat­ion into Jewish MP Dame Margaret Hodge following an outburst at Mr Corbyn created a rift between the Labour leader and his shadow chancellor and long-time ally John McDonnell. In 2018, after the party adopted a new code of conduct that omitted certain examples in the IHRA definition, Dame Margaret approached Mr Corbyn in Parliament to tell him his decision was “outrageous” and calling him “an antisemite and a racist”.

According to the book, “The Labour leader said little. By the time their conversati­on had finished, Hodge was shaking.”

Following the incident, disciplina­ry action against Dame Margaret was launched. “Those who saw the political danger in following the letter of the rulebook rather than conceding in the interests of what they called ‘the Project’ were exasperate­d,” the book claims. “McDonnell was among them.” He was said to have asked Ms Murphy to cancel the disciplina­ry action, and “lobbied Corbyn obsessivel­y over the decision”. At one cabinet meeting, witnesses described Mr McDonnell as being “gripped by an almost biblical temper at the decision”.

Following the cabinet meeting, one senior aide told the authors: “They never spoke for months. Never spoke the whole summer.”

Corbyn’s ‘kitchen cabinet’ in Islington helped him deal with the Jew-hate crisis

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