The Guardian (USA)

In Britain’s degraded politics, fighting racism has become a cynical game

- Gary Younge

“The very serious function of racism is distractio­n,” Toni Morrison argued in a lecture in Portland, Oregon, in 1975. “It keeps you from doing your work. It keeps you explaining, over and over again, your reason for being. Somebody says you have no language and so you spend 20 years proving that you do. Somebody says your head isn’t shaped properly so you have scientists working on the fact that it is. Somebody says that you have no art, so you dredge that up. Somebody says that you have no kingdoms, and so you dredge that up. None of that is necessary. There will always be one more thing.”

So, in the furore over Frank Hester’s comments, let us not be distracted by the question of whether they were racist. Let us not demean ourselves by explaining why the statement “you see Diane Abbott on the TV and … you just want to hate all Black women” is racist. We do not need to explain that this is not a question of rudeness. Racism is an issue of power and equality, not politeness and etiquette. Those who don’t get it, won’t get it.

Nor should we squander any time on how the prime minister, Rishi Sunak, should respond. Less than two weeks ago he took the extraordin­ary step of addressing the nation from outside 10 Downing Street to denounce the fact that “MPs do not feel safe in their homes” and that “longstandi­ng parliament­ary convention­s have been upended because of safety concerns”.

Now he defends taking millions of pounds from Hester, who said he thought that Diane Abbott “should be shot”. That is hypocrisy. It’s not a tough call. Sunak may be the first BritishAsi­an prime minister. But that merely describes the ethnicity and job title of the hypocrite. Adding the adjectives does not change the noun.

He maylead one of the most diverse cabinets in history, but thatdoes not alter the fact that this version of diversity is being bankrolled by a man whose best defence is that he “doesn’t hate all Black women at all”. That is nobody’s contradict­ion but their own.

What, however, is worth spending time on is an exploratio­n of how this incident goes beyond one rich man and the spineless leader he bankrolls, to the racial degradatio­n of our discourse, the instrument­alisation of our grievances and the utter contempt for our intelligen­ce.

It is right to call for Sunak to return the money. But when it comes to this particular issue, the Labour party does not have the moral authority to make that demand, and its opportunis­tic sanctimony in doing so is difficult to stomach.

Hester did not invent British racism. His comments are the product of it. In the run-up to the 2017 election, an Amnesty Internatio­nal investigat­ion found that Abbott had attracted almost half of all the online abuse directed at female MPs. Hester’s comments illustrate a confidence that he could disparage Abbott in the most heinous manner and get away with it. It’s as though she was nothing.

It is not difficult to see why Hester thought Britain’s first Black female MP was fair game.

Abbott had frequently been treated with the utmost disrespect by her own Labour colleagues. In the first parliament­ary Labour party meeting after Jeremy Corbyn became leader, Jess Phillips, a newly elected MP, boasted that she told Abbott, the then shadow internatio­nal developmen­t secretary and an MP of 28 years, to “fuck off” in front of their colleagues. (Abbott denies this happened.) Phillips then invited a pile-on. “People said to me they had always wanted to say that to her, and I don’t know why they don’t as the opportunit­y presents itself every other minute,” she said. She later apologised.

A couple of years later, according to a leaked internal report, Labour officials hostile to Corbyn mocked Abbott for crying in the toilets and suggested telling a journalist where she was. One official called Abbott an “angry woman” (a clear racist trope) while another called her “repulsive”. To my knowledge, none of them have apologised.

The Forde report on factionali­sm in the Labour party, commission­ed by Keir Starmer and conducted by the barrister Martin Forde KC, found that the criticisms of Abbott “are not simply a harsh response to perceived poor performanc­e – they are expression­s of visceral disgust, drawing (consciousl­y or otherwise) on racist tropes, and they bear little resemblanc­e to the criticisms of white male MPs elsewhere in the messages”.

Forde concluded that racism in the party is experience­d through “hearing the particular disdain which colleagues reserve for (for example) ethnic minority MPs”, among other ways.

No one, including Abbott herself, denies she has made mistakes. Last year she sent an appalling letter to the Observer claiming that “Irish, Jewish and Traveller people” do not suffer racism “all their lives”. The criticism that the letter was antisemiti­c was, if anything, too narrow. She was wrong about everything and everyone, not just Jews. Within hours she had apologised profusely and had been suspended from the party, pending an investigat­ion.

Meanwhile Darren Rodwell, who is white and had told the audience at a Black History Month event in Barking that he had the “worst tan possible for a Black man” but had the “passion and the rhythm of the African and the Caribbean” was cleared of wrongdoing by the party andremains Barking’s official Labour candidate.

More than 10 months later, Abbott is still suspended. One wonders what more there is to investigat­e, apart from whether Black women are allowed a second chance and whether the issues of MP security apply to them.

So when Labour lambasts Sunak for his unprincipl­ed and unconvinci­ng response to Hester’s comments, it does not do so in defence of Abbott: those now in charge of the party have been complicit in insulting her for years. Nor is it motivated by combatingt­he levels of anti-Black racism in politics: almost a year after his report came out, Forde lamented that no one from the party had even contacted him to discuss his recommenda­tions.

Labour pursues it because it can score clear political points against its adversarie­s. That is the definition of instrument­alisation. It is not only cynical, it is dangerous. Racism is not a game. It is a serious issue that affects the lives of millions of people. When a party or faction exploits racism for its own political or electoral advantage, it cheapens the accusation and deepens the cynicism. What it does not do is address the racism or advance the cause of equality.

It is a distractio­n. It’s clear what it does for Labour. It’s not clear what it does for Black people, or for Abbott.

Gary Younge is a sociology professor at the University of Manchester. His most recent book is Dispatches from the Diaspora: from Nelson Mandela to Black Lives Matter

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• This article was amended on 15 March 2024. In an earlier version, comments made by Frank Hester during a meeting at TPP’s headquarte­rs, which were about an executive from another organisati­on, were erroneousl­y included as being remarks he had made about Diane Abbott MP. The relevant comments have been removed.

 ?? ?? Diane Abbott in 2019. Photograph: Dominc Lipinski/PA
Diane Abbott in 2019. Photograph: Dominc Lipinski/PA

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