The Scotsman

All forms of bigotry must be condemned

True leadership requires our elected representa­tives to stop playing politics and set an example to the country

-

At Prime Minister’s Questions, Keir Starmer and Rishi Sunak set about each other in the usual knockabout style, with the Labour leader suggesting the Conservati­ves had become “the political wing of the Flat Earth Society” following Liz Truss’s delusional remarks about how her brief stint as Prime Minister was sabotaged by a supposed “deep state”.

Following a week of criticism of Tory MP Lee Anderson’s Islamophob­ic remarks about London mayor Sadiq Khan, Sunak pointed to the Labour candidate in today’s Rochdale by-election – disowned by the party after revelation­s he blamed “people in the media from certain Jewish quarters" for the suspension of a propalesti­nian MP. “We expel anti-semites, he makes them Labour candidates,” the Prime Minister declared.

This was unfair to the Labour leader who has done much to rid his party of the stain of anti-semitism that grew under Jeremy Corbyn. It stretches credibilit­y beyond breaking point that he would actually want any candidates with such appalling views. However, it is right to take a hard line on discrimina­tion and, when parties fail to properly vet candidates, they should be hauled over the coals.

The problem is that some politician­s seem to be acting as if being tough on anti-semitism is somehow a defence against accusation­s of Islamophob­ia and vice versa. Instead of seeing these two forms of prejudice as being in opposition, our political leaders should be emphasisin­g that they are one and the same. All bigotry is a moral failing based on the same flawed way of thinking. Rather than recognisin­g the fundamenta­l truth that human beings are individual­s, racists over-simplify the world into different groups based on ethnicity and religion, then seek to whip up hatred against an entire group.

First, our political leaders should set their own houses in order, as Starmer has been doing and Sunak needs to do with a greater degree of vigour. Second, they should stop playing politics with the issue. And third, they should speak with one, united voice, standing side by side to condemn all prejudice, lest misguided members of our society get the wrong idea.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom