The Jewish Chronicle

MP Burgon questioned on Labour hate during Sun libel hearing

- BY JC REPORTER

THE SHADOW Justice Secretary, Richard Burgon, faced repeated questions about Labour’s record on antisemiti­sm during his libel action against the Sun newspaper at the High Court in London last week.

Mr Burgon is suing the newspaper for claiming he played in a heavy metal band that used Nazi imagery on an album cover.

Lawyers acting for the tabloid asked whether the Shadow Justice Secretary would hypothetic­ally be willing to perform a song with the band — called Dream Tröll — in front of the disputed artwork at a gig in areas with large Jewish population­s such as “parts of north London” or Tel Aviv.

Mr Burgon repeatedly insisted that he would not appear on a stage that featured Third Reich iconograph­y but said that the artwork at the heart of the dispute was influenced by the 1970s band Black Sabbath, not the Nazis.

“I do not accept that it is Nazi iconograph­y. It is a pastiche or spoof of an album by a famous rock band from the 1970s,” he said.

The article, published in April 2017, claimed the typeface used for the letter “S” in a Dream Tröll social media post entitled “We Sold Our Soul For Rock N Tröll” paid homage to the logo of Adolf Hitler’s SS paramilita­ry organisati­on, which played a key role in the Holocaust.

Mr Burgon was also accused by lawyers of “using expensive lawyers to shut down references to antisemiti­sm in the press” and was repeatedly asked about comments about the Holocaust made by former mayor of London Ken Livingston­e and the decision by Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn to support a graffiti artist whose work featured antisemiti­c tropes.

Mr Burgon said he was deeply concerned about antisemiti­sm within Labour and had “never denied there is an issue with this gravest of matters”, but insisted that it was unconnecte­d to his involvemen­t with the band.

Continuing his evidence on the second day of the case, Mr Burgon said he was “very distressed” about the publicatio­n of the article, which his lawyers said involved a “deliberate misreprese­ntation” for political reasons.

Adam Wolanski QC, acting for the newspaper, asked: “Is it fair to say you don’t like the Sun very much?”

Mr Burgon responded: “I probably like them as much as they like me.”

In his statement to the court, Sun political editor Tom Newton Dunn, who is a joint defendant alongside his newspaper, said: “I remain firmly of the opinion that it is completely inappropri­ate for [Burgon] to maintain associatio­ns with imagery, iconograph­y and cultural references which are offensive, provocativ­e and potentiall­y upsetting to a number of everyday British citizens.”

 ?? PHOTO: UK PARLIAMENT ?? Claim: Burgon
PHOTO: UK PARLIAMENT Claim: Burgon

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