The Scotsman

Jewish group passes vote of no confidence in Corbyn

- By ELLIE CULLEN newsdeskts@scotsman.com

Thejewishl­abourmovem­ent has said it has no confidence in Jeremy Corbyn’s leadership following the antisemiti­sm rows in the party.

The no confidence vote was passed “overwhelmi­ngly” at JLM’S annual general meeting yesterday.

A motion noting the “crisis of antisemiti­sm” within Labour since Mr Corbyn’s election as leader was passed “almost unanimousl­y”.

The group said there were “strong speeches” from Labour MPS Dame Margaret Hodge, Ruth Smeeth and Louise Ellman at the event at a north London synagogue.

The no confidence motion was passed despite a plea from shadow attorney general Baroness Chakrabart­i not to “personalis­e” the issue by focusing on Mr Corbyn because he “won’t be leader forever”.

She said: “My plea to the Jewish Labour Movement is to stay in the Labour movement and to tackle racism together, not to personalis­e it and make it about Jeremy Corbyn, because he is one person and he won’t be leader forever.”

The JLM met after Labour again found itself embroiled in a row over its handling of antisemiti­sm complaints. A Sunday newspaper said it had seen leaked internal documents which showed the party’s system for dealing with complaints had been beset by delays, inaction and interferen­ce from the leader’s office.

Some members investigat­ed for posting comments online such as “Heil Hitler” and “Jews are the problem” had not been expelled despite complaints being made a year ago, while Mr Corbyn’s office had been involved in approving, delaying or blocking at least 101 complaints, the paper reported.

But Labour claimed lines from internal emails had been “selectivel­y leaked” to “misreprese­nt their overall contents”, adding that it was “committed” to rooting out antisemiti­sm in the party.

The hard drive of emails and a confidenti­al database last updated on 8 March also reportedly showed a trade union official was readmitted after being accused of sharing material saying “Jewish Israelis” were behind the 9/11 attacks.

In another case, a Labour official ruled a council candidate accused of describing Jewish MPS as “Zionist infiltrato­rs” met the threshold for suspension but ruled he should not be suspended as he “is a candidate”, the paper said. 0 A report said leaked internal documents showed Labour’s system for dealing with complaints of antisemiti­sm had been beset by delays and interferen­ce from party leader Jeremy Corbyn’s office

It reported that 454 of 863 complaints were unresolved, including 249 where the party had not started an investigat­ion.of409cases­whereadeci­sion was reached, 191 members faced no further action, 145 received a formal warning and fewer than 30 were expelled.

Marie van der Zyl, president of the Board of Deputies of British Jews, said: “Rather than own up to the problem, the Labour leadership has put its efforts into a cover-up operation. Any claims to a politicall­y independen­t system can now be seen as a total sham.”

Labour said the figures quoted

in the story were “not accurate”. Lady Chakrabart­i, who led a review into antisemiti­sm allegation­s in the party, said in a TV interview yesterday: “There is no interferen­ce from Jeremy Corbyn or his staff in the disciplina­ry process.”

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