The Jewish Chronicle

Until Labour shows that zero tolerance is more than a slogan, it is no safe home

- BY EUAN PHILLIPS Euan Philipps is spokespers­on for Labour Against Antisemiti­sm

VAUGUST IS A difficult month for politics watchers: the doldrums of the summer recess are pretty dull with only various internal elections to offer distractio­n.

WhiletheLi­bDemshaveb­roughtthei­r interminab­le leadership election to a close, the Labour Party is in the middle of another election for NEC members.

The war between moderate Labour and hard left Labour for the support of the soft left majority is being fought out on social media and in virtual CLP meetings, to the interest of almost no-one, and in the shadow of the EHRC report into institutio­nal racism in the party — which is due to drop at any point in the next few weeks.

Two eye catching developmen­ts last week were the separate but similar claims made by two moderate candidates, Alice Perry and Gurinder Singh-Josan, that the Labour Party’s complaints process have been radically improved in recent months.

Mr Singh-Josan began by boldly asserting in an open letter to

Jews who left the party under Jeremy Corbyn that, “It is safe to come home”, while Ms

Perry described in an article on LabourList how Labour’s disciplina­ry panels are now “constructi­ve, fair and nonfaction­al”.

Clearing the backlog of antisemiti­sm cases for

Labour is

an important commitment, given the huge numbers of reports submitted (LAAS members have themselves sent in hundreds since 2016).

It is also undoubtedl­y positive that disciplina­ry panels are meeting more frequently — after all, there are a lot of cases of antisemiti­sm to process (according to Mr Singh-Josan some 180 cases specifical­ly related to antisemiti­sm have appeared in front of the panels since April).

But that’s about as far as it goes for the positives. What is most important is what we aren’t being told: how many of these cases are leading to expulsions.

The key measure of how seriously anti-Jewish racism is now being taken within Labour is the adoption of a zerotolera­nce approach.

Without proof that the leadership is putting its money where its mouth is, there is no way of reassuring Jewish members that they can begin attending local party meetings with any degree of confidence and security.

Will racist, abusive members still be in place?

Will their views continue to be tolerated, even encouraged?

And if racist views are voiced, will they be dealt with?

Big-name Labour players like suspended NEC member Pete Willsman and RMT Assistant General Secretary Steve Hedley are still party members, despite widespread coverage of comments attributed to them which appear to be antisemiti­c.

The leadership’s failure to expel them suggests that it is still equivocati­ng over taking the kind of clear, strong action needed.

What we are actually hearing are the same messages trotted out by former Labour General Secretary Jennie Formby, who in February 2019 sought to reassure observers that Labour was getting to grips with its antisemiti­sm crisis by publishing a series of statistics — including claims that panels were meeting more frequently, and more cases were being seen.

Alice Perry’s note that there are a now “a broader range of sanctions for people shown to be guilty of various offences” should also raise a note of alarm.

For those of us who watched repeat offenders get sent on training courses and given reminders of good conduct again and again despite overwhelmi­ng evidence of seriously problemati­c behaviour, this reads like an organisati­on still far too cautious and timid to tackle the racists in its midst head-on.

Those of us who could not stand to see what was happening under Jeremy Corbyn took action by providing the mountain of evidence on which the EHRC decided to open its investigat­ion (LAAS submitted a 15,000page document in May 2019).

There is a wide expectatio­n that the EHRC’s report will provide the moderates in Labour with the cover to deliver the radical and difficult reforms the organisati­on needs.

However, that doesn’t mean the moderates can sit on their hands now, and nor should goodwill towards moderates excuse their apparent attempts to misreprese­nt the handling of the antisemiti­sm crisis for campaignin­g advantage.

While the shift in tone has been important, the culture change required to make antisemite­s feel as uncomforta­ble on the Left as Jews have been made to feel needs honesty and transparen­cy.

Trying to persuade those of us who were actively engaged over the last four years that the Labour Party has changed will certainly fail if, yet again, all we are offered is platitudes.

There are a number of steps that could be taken that do not need direction from the EHRC, including the publicatio­n of detailed statistics showing expulsion rates.

What is needed is evidence of action, independen­tly verified and comprehens­ive data, and the determinat­ion to process cases like that of Pete Willsman no matter how politicall­y difficult.

Until then, even moderates cannot be expected to be taken seriously on this most important of issues — however well-intentione­d they might be.

 ?? PHOTOS: GETTY IMAGES ?? Pete Willsman
PHOTOS: GETTY IMAGES Pete Willsman
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 ??  ?? Steve Hedley
Steve Hedley

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