Edinburgh Evening News

It’s time to kick out far right Tory party racists and conspiraci­sts

- Angus Robertson

A creeping farright has, in the last 14 years, simply walked in and been handed the levers of power

Former Tory party deputy chair

Lee Anderson’s comments were Islamophob­ic. No question about it. Anderson, MP for Ashfield and already someone with a record of misguided remarks, claims “Islamists” have “got control” of London Mayor Sadiq Khan.

Buoyed in his right-wing bubble surroundin­gs on GB News, Anderson’s true colours shone through as he blew the worst kind of dog whistle.

He has, to date, refused to apologise. It is quite unbelievab­le how a sitting MP, who was the Conservati­ve party’s deputy chair until last month, is unable to see how ugly and prejudiced his words are.

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, who tried to hide from commenting for two days, was called out by former Tory chair Baroness Saida Warsi who has, to her credit, been appealing to the Conservati­ve party to rid itself of its Islamophob­ia problem for years.

“What is it about the Prime Minister that he can’t even call out anti-Muslim racism and antiMuslim bigotry? Why can’t he just use those words?” She said, adding The Prime Minister needed to “find the language” to “call Islamophob­ia Islamophob­ia”.

This was something the Deputy Prime Minister Oliver Dowden could not manage to do when asked about the blatantly Islamophob­ic statements from Anderson.

Eventually, Sunak said Anderson’s comments were wrong but that, in his view, the Tories did not have a problem with Islamophob­ia. Those two mutually contradict­ory statements uttered in one breath reveal either a cluelessne­ss about the unsavoury anti-Muslim history of his party called out time and time again by Baroness Warsi or just a willingnes­s to ignore it.

Not long before this saga, former Home Secretary Suella Braverman claimed that Islamists were now “in charge” in the UK. She said a ‘misguided dogma of multicultu­ralism’ has proved ‘toxic’ for Europe. It is total rubbish. Deeply rooted prejudice exists in all societies, but the only way to better it is through integratio­n and understand­ing of other cultures.

Islamophob­ia is not the only misguided dogma rife in the Tory party. Comments about other minorities and the perpetuati­on of conspiracy theories seem to be par for the course now.

Take former Prime Minister Liz Truss who, having released her new book, appeared on ‘Real America’s Voice’, a far-right TV channel. The interviewe­r was former chief strategist to Donald Trump, Steve Bannon.

Truss, whose 45-day tenure decimated the British economy, argued that her dismal failure had been due to the ‘deep state’, a well-known conspiracy theory about a non-existent cabal controllin­g government.

It is really important to acknowledg­e that these comments are made not by people on the fringes of the fringes, but those who are or have been central decision-makers of the Conservati­ve party and the Government of the United Kingdom, including Prime Ministers – we need not revisit the litany of tropes and lies voiced by Boris Johnson. We have seen the rise of the populist far-right across the Western world. Some commentato­rs suggest the UK has largely avoided it. The truth is much more insidious.

A creeping far-right has, in the last 14 years of Tory government, simply walked in and been handed the levers of power to the cheers of large swathes of the party membership.

This needs to stop. In every Tory seat in Scotland, the SNP are the closest challenger­s by far. To rid Scotland of these far-right conspiraci­st Tories, vote SNP.

 ?? ?? Prime Minister Rishi Sunak with Lee Anderson during a visit to a school in Sutton in Ashfield
Prime Minister Rishi Sunak with Lee Anderson during a visit to a school in Sutton in Ashfield
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