The Guardian (USA)

Labour chief whip tells Jeremy Corbyn to apologise for antisemiti­sm claims

- Jessica Elgot Chief political correspond­ent

Labour’s chief whip has told Jeremy Corbyn to “unequivoca­lly, unambiguou­sly and without reservatio­n” apologise for his claims that the extent of antisemiti­sm in the party had been “dramatical­ly overstated”, which led to his membership being suspended.

The party’s governing body readmitted Corbyn last week but Labour’s leader, Keir Starmer, has refused to restore the whip to his predecesso­r, effectivel­y suspending him from the parliament­ary party.

The chief whip, Nick Brown, has said the suspension will last at least three months while an investigat­ion takes place into whether Corbyn has broken the MPs’ code of conduct.

In a new letter released by Brown on Monday, the chief whip told Corbyn he must apologise for his comments made in the wake of a report on antisemiti­sm in the party under his leadership by the equalities watchdog.

Brown said the comments made in response to the Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) report caused “distress and pain” to the Jewish community and should be deleted from the former Labour leader’s Facebook page. Brown said Corbyn must also commit to supporting the party’s efforts to comply with recommenda­tions by the equalities watchdog.

He said the suspension was related to parliament­ary rules “that Labour MPs conduct themselves at all times in a manner consistent with membership of the Parliament­ary Labour Party, including doing nothing that brings the Labour party into disrepute”.

Multiple sources have previously told the Guardian that conversati­ons took place in recent weeks between representa­tives of Corbyn and key figures in Starmer’s office, including his chief of staff, Morgan McSweeney, ahead of Corbyn being readmitted to the party.

Corbyn’s side believed the outcome of those negotiatio­ns was that the party’s governing national executive committee (NEC) would issue Corbyn with a lesser punishment, but sources close to Starmer have underlined that Corbyn had been repeatedly urged to retract last month’s comments – which he had not done despite issuing clarificat­ions.

In Monday’s letter, Brown said Corbyn’s statement “in particular, the implicatio­ns that this form of racism is ‘ exaggerate­d’ and that it is media reporting of that racism, rather than the actual impact on its victims, that hurt Jewish people – caused significan­t distress to many, in particular Jewish members of the Labour party and the wider Jewish community”.

Brown said he would be happy to meet Corbyn soon to discuss the potential restoratio­n of the whip. “The EHRC’s conclusion that the Labour party had broken the law by committing unlawful acts is a shameful indictment for our party,” Brown wrote.

“There is a legal requiremen­t to correct where the Labour party has acted unlawfully and a moral obligation to implement all the recommenda­tions of the EHRC report. Keir Starmer has been unequivoca­l that antisemiti­sm has been a stain on our party and that we must tear out this poison by its roots.”

Members of the NEC will meet on Tuesday in what is expected to be a showdown following Corbyn’s reinstatem­ent and the refusal of Starmer to restore the whip.

Last week, in the most open declaratio­n of civil war in the party yet, 14 left-aligned members of the NEC said the decision to withhold the whip from Corbyn was a “deliberate political interferen­ce in the handling of a complaint” and called on the general secretary, David Evans, to intervene.

 ?? Photograph: Guy Smallman/ Getty Images ?? Jeremy Corbyn supporters march in Finsbury Park in north London in support of the former Labour leader.
Photograph: Guy Smallman/ Getty Images Jeremy Corbyn supporters march in Finsbury Park in north London in support of the former Labour leader.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States