The Jerusalem Post

Corbyn caves

Labour to adopt IHRA antisemiti­sm definition – with a caveat

- • By JEREMY SHARON

In the latest installmen­t of the UK Labour Party’s antisemiti­sm row, the party’s ruling body will convene on Tuesday to discuss once again the adoption of an internatio­nally recognized definition of antisemiti­sm.

It is thought that Labour’s National Executive Committee (NEC) will now adopt the full version of the Internatio­nal Holocaust Remembranc­e Alliance (IHRA) definition, but add an addendum or caveat regarding criticism of Israel and Zionism.

Jewish communal organizati­ons believe that any such caveat will be designed to permit the kind of anti-Zionist rhetoric that has morphed into antisemiti­sm and has so plagued the Labour Party in recent years, including among its leadership and specifical­ly party leader Jeremy Corbyn.

In July, the NEC controvers­ially adopted an amended version of the IHRA definition, but omitted four critical examples from it, including accusing Jewish citizens of being more loyal to Israel than their home country; denying the Jewish people their right to self-determinat­ion, e.g. by claiming that the State of Israel is a racist endeavor; “drawing comparison­s of contempora­ry Israeli policy to that of the Nazis”; and applying double standards to Israel.

Jewish communal organizati­ons and leaders took particular exception to the Labour Party’s failure to consult with them when formulatin­g its antisemiti­sm guidelines.

The Board of Deputies, a leading communal organizati­on, wrote a letter to the NEC general-secretary Jennie Formby last week calling again on the committee to adopt the full IHRA definition.

The organizati­on says that it has not received a response to the letter, or even an acknowledg­ment that it was received, noting that the Labour Party has once again failed to consult with it or any other Jewish organizati­on ahead of the NEC’s meeting on Tuesday.

“This is about antisemiti­sm, racism and prejudice, so you would imagine they would want to consult with the Jewish community about the issue,” said a spokesman for the Board of Deputies.

Similarly, the Jewish Labour Movement, a formal affiliate of the Labour Party, has said that it has “not been consulted in the slightest” about whatever definition and addendum the NEC might adopt on Tuesday.

The JLM has insisted that only the adoption of the full IHRA definition without any caveats or dilution will be accepted, saying that there is so little trust in the Labour Party by the Jewish community that any addendum or caveats will be viewed with extreme skepticism.

A spokesman for the Labour Party said he could not comment on the NEC’s Tuesday agenda.

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 ?? (Simon Dawson/Reuters) ?? IS LABOUR PARTY leader Jeremy Corbyn mending fences? Jewish communal organizati­ons believe that any caveat will be designed to permit anti-Zionist rhetoric.
(Simon Dawson/Reuters) IS LABOUR PARTY leader Jeremy Corbyn mending fences? Jewish communal organizati­ons believe that any caveat will be designed to permit anti-Zionist rhetoric.

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