The Jerusalem Post

New Labour leader failing to defeat antisemiti­sm

Despite the hiccups, Starmer has taken strong steps to distance himself from the Corbyn era

- • By CNAAN LIPHSHIZ

New UK Labour Party leader Keir Starmer still can’t quite get over the Corbyn hump.

Shortly after his election to head the party a month ago, Starmer promised to implement a zero-tolerance policy on antisemiti­sm. For British Jewry, it was a refreshing new start after the last leader, Jeremy Corbyn, left the stain of a yearslong antisemiti­sm scandal.

But Starmer’s vow has quickly been put to the test, and after a controvers­ial call involving two Labour lawmakers, leading British Jewish organizati­ons now say he is failing it.

First, a few weeks ago, Starmer promoted three lawmakers who have strained relationsh­ips with the Jewish community to leadership positions in Labour. Some saw it as a warning sign, while other analysts said the move was needed to stabilize the party in a post-Corbyn landscape.

Then on Wednesday, two of Labour’s most prominent lawmakers – Diane Abbott and Bell Ribeiro-Addy, its previous shadow interior and immigratio­n ministers, respective­ly – addressed an online meeting that featured well-known activists who have been kicked out of the party over antisemiti­sm.

The call, first reported by the Jewish Chronicle, was organized by the pro-Corbyn far-left fringes of Labour under the auspices of a newly formed group called Don’t Leave, Organise (the group’s name is a call to the far Left). It included Jackie

Walker, who was ousted from Labour in 2019 for numerous negative statements about Jews, including that they were “chief financiers of the sugar and slave trade.”

According to Walker’s website, her father, Jack Cohen, was a Russian Ashkenazi Jew. Last month, she wrote on Facebook that Starmer “only talks to Zionist Jews and the Tories at synagogue.” Starmer’s wife, attorney Victoria Alexander, comes from a Jewish family and has family in Israel. Starmer told the Jewish News that he hoped to travel soon to Israel with their two children.

“I absolutely support the right of Israel to exist as a homeland,” he told the newspaper. “I support Zionism without qualificat­ion.”

Also on the call was Tony Greenstein, who is Jewish and was expelled in 2016 over antisemiti­sm allegation­s. He has called Israel “Hitler’s bastard offspring” and helped mainstream the antisemiti­c pejorative “Zio.”

During the call, participan­ts defended Ken Livingston­e, a former London mayor who in 2016 said Hitler “was supporting Zionism before he went mad and ended up killing six million Jews.”

Livingston­e left Labor in 2018 amid pressure to expel him. Ribeiro-Addy and Abbott did not address antisemiti­sm during the call, according to the Campaign Against Antisemiti­sm, a major Jewish watchdog that has been at the forefront of the community’s fight with Corbyn.

In his only response about the call, Starmer told the Bury Times that he is “looking” into it.

“What I’ve done since I’ve been leader of the Labour Party is to take the first opportunit­y to apologise for the way we’ve dealt with antisemiti­sm in the party, to build links with the Jewish community; to begin to get to grips with the cases,” he said. “Obviously we’re looking at the circumstan­ces of the meeting last night, but the most important thing is to build that relationsh­ip. And I know that’s going to be a difficult thing to do.”

An official Labour Party statement had stronger words.

“The previous comments made by some of the individual­s on this call are completely unacceptab­le,” it said. “These are not people who support the values of the Labour Party. This is being made clear to the Labour MPs who attended the call in the strongest possible terms, and they are being reminded of their responsibi­lities and obligation­s.”

This didn’t satisfy the Campaign Against Antisemiti­sm.

In its strongest rebuke of Starmer so far, the watchdog group branded his handling of the scandal “a failure to discipline” the lawmakers, proceeding in a statement to say it “condemned Sir Keir Starmer for failing to take action.”

Instead of “tearing antisemiti­sm out by its roots, Sir Keir has welched,” Gideon Falter, its chief executive, said in a statement. “Through his inaction he is telling Britain’s Jews loud and clear that his apologies are meaningles­s, his promises will be broken, and MPs who consort with even the most notorious expelled activists still have a place on the Labour benches.”

The president of the centrist Board of Deputies of British Jews had similar feelings.

“We would urge Labour to take swift and decisive action to show that this is a new era, rather than a false dawn,” Marie van der Zyl wrote in a statement Thursday. She called the lawmakers’ attendance at the meeting “completely unacceptab­le” even for ordinary members of Labour, much less lawmakers.

Labour Against Antisemiti­sm, a group critical of Corbyn and his legacy, also attacked Starmer.

“His decision to remind the two MPs of their responsibi­lities is an inadequate measure that fails to meet the standards he agreed to just a few weeks ago,” the group wrote in a statement. By not disciplini­ng the two lawmakers, Starmer “demonstrat­ed a disappoint­ing level of moral and political cowardice.”

Starmer has good reasons to tread lightly. His first weeks as Labour leader have been a walk on a precarious tightrope. On the coronaviru­s crisis, he has attempted to criticize the ruling Conservati­ve Party while demonstrat­ing solidarity with the government.

On the antisemiti­sm front, he has had to balance flushing out the controvers­y with appealing to the many Corbyn loyalist holdovers.

“[If] Corbyn loyalists are made to understand they have no place in Labour under Starmer, that’s simply making sure they’ll misbehave,” one Labour activist told the Jewish Telegraphi­c Agency earlier this month.

Despite the hiccups, Starmer has taken several strong steps to distance himself from the Corbyn era, and British Jews have noticed.

Four days into Starmer’s tenure, van der Zyl said in a statement that he had achieved “more than his predecesso­r in four years in addressing antisemiti­sm within the Labour Party.”

“I know that the failure of the Labour Party to deal with antisemiti­sm has caused great grief in Jewish communitie­s,” Starmer said in a video greeting for Passover on April 8, in which he apologized for the failing.

“If you are antisemiti­c, you cannot and should not be in the Labour Party. No ifs, no buts.” (JTA)

 ?? (Hannah McKay/Reuters) ?? KEIR STARMER speaks during a Labour Party campaign in November. ‘I know that the failure of the Labour Party to deal with antisemiti­sm has caused great grief in Jewish communitie­s.’
(Hannah McKay/Reuters) KEIR STARMER speaks during a Labour Party campaign in November. ‘I know that the failure of the Labour Party to deal with antisemiti­sm has caused great grief in Jewish communitie­s.’

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