Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

7 UK lawmakers quit Labour Party over Brexit, anti-semitism

- karla adam, William BY· booth (c) 2019, The Washington Post Feb 18, 2019 -

LONDON -- Seven pro-europe lawmakers abruptly quit the opposition Labour Party on Monday over their frustratio­n with its leader Jeremy Corbyn’s handling of Brexit and antisemiti­sm allegation­s in the ranks.

The seven said that they would sit in Parliament as an independen­t group. Their defection creates new opportunit­ies and complicati­ons for the upcoming votes on how Britain leaves the European Union next month -if it leaves at all. At a morning news conference, Parliament member Luciana Berger said she had become “embarrasse­d” and “ashamed” of the Labour Party, which she said was “institutio­nally anti-semitic.” Berger, who is Jewish, added she was leaving behind a culture of “bullying, bigotry and intimidati­on.” Chris Leslie, another breakaway lawmaker, said the party had been “hijacked by the machine politics of the hard left” and that Labour’s “betrayal on Europe was visible for all to see.” While many Labour party members support a second referendum on whether to leave the European Union, Corbyn has been cold to the idea of a do-over. Leslie said “...the last three years have confirmed how irresponsi­ble it would be to allow this leader of the opposition to take the office of prime minister of the United Kingdom. Many people still in the Labour Party will privately admit this to be true,” Leslie said.

“The pursuit of policies that would threaten our national security through hostility to NATO. The refusal to act when needed to help those when facing humanitari­an distress, preferring to believe states hostile to our country rather than believing our police and security services - these are all rooted in the Labour leadership’s obsession with a narrow, outdated ideology,” Leslie said.

Corbyn said he was “disappoint­ed” with the resignatio­ns but boasted of “the Labour policies that inspired millions at the last election and saw us increase our vote by the largest share since 1945.”

Labour lawmakers said they were dismayed by the news of the resignatio­ns. Lucy Powell, a member of Parliament, tweeted that it was the “wrong decision.” But she said that her friend and former colleague Berger had been subject to “despicable and appalling abuse.” Powell said, “her leaving must make us redouble our efforts to tackle all anti-semitism in the Party.”

Corbyn has conceded that antisemiti­sm is “a real problem that Labour is working to overcome.”

In a piece in the Guardian last year, Corbyn revealed that internal investigat­ions of online chatter among party members found disturbing evidence that anti-jewish “poison” was present. “Labour staff have seen examples of Holocaust denial, crude stereotype­s of Jewish bankers, conspiracy theories blaming 9/11 on Israel, and even one individual who appeared to believe that Hitler had been misunderst­ood,” Corbyn wrote.

London mayor Sadiq Khan, a star in the Labour Party, said he wished the departing members would have stayed.

Writing on his Facebook page, Khan agreed that there needed to be another Brexit referendum and that Labour needed to do more to “root out the evil of anti-semitism.” But he argued it should be done from within the party. “When the Labour Party splits it only leads to one outcome - a Tory government - and that means a hard Tory Brexit,” he wrote.

 ??  ?? Luciana Berger speaks during a press conference (Daily Mail)
Luciana Berger speaks during a press conference (Daily Mail)

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