Manchester Evening News

Corbyn ‘failed to halt anti-Semitism’

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JEREMY Corbyn’s attempt to build bridges with Jewish community leaders have received another setback after they accused him of failing to take action to tackle antiSemiti­sm in the Labour Party.

After more than two hours of talks with the Labour leader at Westminste­r, the Board of Deputies and the Jewish Leadership Council (JLC) said their meeting was a “disappoint­ing missed opportunit­y” to address the issue.

In a joint statement, the board’s president, Jonathan Arkush, and JLC chair Jonathan Goldstein said Mr Corbyn had failed to adopt any of the measures they had proposed following last month’s demonstrat­ion outside Parliament against anti-Semitism in Labour.

“Our sole objective from this meeting was to build trust with Mr Corbyn, but this will not be possible until and unless he and the party turn their many strong words against anti-Semitism into equally strong actions in order to bring about a deep cultural change in his supporters’ attitude to Jews,” they said.

In response, Mr Corbyn said he was “absolutely committed” to rooting out antiSemiti­sm in the party and had instructed new general secretary Jennie Formby to overhaul its disciplina­ry procedures to ensure complaints were dealt with “swiftly and fairly”.

“We will lay out the further steps we are taking in the coming weeks. We will continue to engage and work with Jewish community organisati­ons to deal with this issue.

“Our party will not fail our Jewish brothers and sisters,” he said.

The meeting leaves relations between Labour and the mainstream Jewish organisati­ons at a low ebb, amid claims that some of the most vitriolic anti-Semitic abuse has come from hard left supporters of Mr Corbyn. Ahead of the meeting, Mr Corbyn used an article for London’s Evening Standard to again apologise for the party’s failure to “fully to get to grips with the problem”.

“My party and I are sorry for the hurt and distress caused,” he said.

However, Mr Arkush and Mr Goldstein said that after “two years of inactivity” by the Labour leadership, such statements were no longer enough.

They said the proposals they had put forward - which included a fixed timetable for dealing with outstandin­g case of anti-Semitism, expediting long-standing cases like that of Ken Livingston­e, and the “transparen­t oversight” of the party’s disciplina­ry process - was the “minimum level of action” they expected.

“Words in letters and newspaper articles will never be enough. We welcome the fact that Mr Corbyn’s words have changed but it is action by which the Jewish community will judge him and the Labour Party,” they said.

“Thousands of British Jews did not demonstrat­e outside Parliament just for a few lawyers and another newspaper article; they demanded action and so do we.”

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Jeremy Corbyn

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