Western Mail

Call to expel Ken Livingston­e from the Labour party

- SHAUN CONNOLLY newdsesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

KEN Livingston­e can no longer remain in the Labour Party due to his controvers­ial comments regarding Hitler and Zionism, shadow Attorney General Shami Chakrabart­i has said.

In a blistering attack on the former London mayor, Ms Chakrabart­i said Mr Livingston­e had brought shame upon the party and Labour now needed to apologise to the Jewish community.

The comments came as Mr Livingston­e, who is suspended from the party due to his claim that Hitler supported Zionism in the 1930s, has signalled he will resist any move to expel him.

Ms Chakrabart­i told BBC One’s Sunday Politics: “I don’t believe that Ken Livingston­e can any longer be in the Labour Party.

“We can’t run away from the fact that he has repeated really, really incendiary remarks.

“To compare somebody who was trying to escape Nazis with Nazis themselves, and to do so again, and again, and again and again, even when you know that this has caused the deepest hurt and upset and embarrassm­ent to the party, is completely unacceptab­le in my view.”

The shadow attorney general, who produced a report into antiSemiti­sm in the Labour Party which some Jewish groups branded a whitewash, added: “I find it very difficult, very difficult now to see how any rational decisionma­ker could allow Mr Livingston­e to stay in our party. He has brought it repeatedly into disrepute. He has brought shame upon it, and his own legacy.

“And we need to apologise to Jewish members, supporters and voters for the insult, the incendiary remarks equating people trying to escape Nazis with Nazis themselves.”

Ms Chakrabart­i indicated that the Livingston­e controvers­y had damaged Labour in recent local elections.

The former London mayor, who has been suspended for the past two years, has described the allegation­s against him as a “big smear”.

Mr Livingston­e was originally suspended in 2016 following a radio interview in which he said: “Hitler was supporting Zionism before he went mad and ended up killing six million Jews.” However, he argued that he had not actually said Hitler was a Zionist.

Ms Chakrabart­i said “factionali­sm” in the party was part of the reason her report has not been fully implemente­d after two years.

She said: “On the one hand there were some people, maybe there still remains a minority of people, who think that to be loyal to the leader, to Jeremy Corbyn, is to look away from this problem that exists in society, that exists on the right of politics and, yes, exists on the left of politics.

“I think at times there were people who claimed to be supportive of Jeremy, who looked the other way, for example when they were involved in disciplina­ry processes, but I’m sorry to say the factional problem worked the other way too and there were sometimes people charged with dealing with disciplina­ry cases who would rather leak the bad behaviour to the newspapers than actually produce sound legal cases against people who really should have faced more robust discipline in my view.”

 ?? Danny Lawson ?? > Angela and Richard Rooke and their daughter Jessica with their house near Tadcaster in Yorkshire, that they have decorated ahead of Saturday’s royal wedding of Prince Harry and Meghan Markle. The family plan to watch the royal wedding at home amid...
Danny Lawson > Angela and Richard Rooke and their daughter Jessica with their house near Tadcaster in Yorkshire, that they have decorated ahead of Saturday’s royal wedding of Prince Harry and Meghan Markle. The family plan to watch the royal wedding at home amid...
 ??  ?? > Labour’s shadow Attorney General Shami Chakrabart­i
> Labour’s shadow Attorney General Shami Chakrabart­i

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