The Jewish Chronicle

CHUKA UMUNNA

- INTERVIEW BY LEE HARPIN

CHUKA UMUNNA has insisted the two main political parties are “utterly broken and past their sell-by dates” after telling the JC that his own new group offers “progressiv­e values which have huge resonance within the Jewish community”.

The ex-Labour MP, who last week became spokesman of The Independen­t Group (TIG) of breakaway parliament­arians, said neither the Conservati­ve Party nor his own former party had any “authority whatsoever” to lecture one another on the evils of antisemiti­sm or Islamophob­ia within their ranks.

Speaking to the JC, Mr Umunna rounded on former Labour colleagues who have failed to publicly condemn Jew-hatred in Jeremy Corbyn’s party: “The reason I have been so outspoken on antisemiti­sm is that racism is racism — and my family have been victims of it.

“What has been so disappoint­ing is that people who I thought were good, decent, principled people have sat on their hands and adopted public silence on the issue — while privately sending messages to Jewish MPs.

“They have not been prepared to put their money where their mouths are when it comes to their so-called antiracist principles. It is so dishearten­ing and so disappoint­ing.”

When asked about the failure of BAME MPs such as Diane Abbott and Dawn Butler to speak out more vocally both on antisemiti­sm or the regular jibes directed at Mr Umunna himself suggesting he was a “coconut” or an “uncle Tom”, he said: “They are in complete denial. It may be Jewish people who are the target of racism by some in society — but it will be black people next, it always has been. That’s why I think the denial has been so shameful.

“If you can’t recognise this is an institutio­nal problem you are going to be completely incapable of dealing with it and rooting it out.”

Mr Umunna said he gives “full credit” to deputy Labour leader Tom Watson for trying to organise a rebellion of MPs.

“Tom has shown good leadership on our departure and on the antisemiti­sm issue,” he said.

But of his attempt to challenge Mr Corbyn’s leadership, he added: “By all means give it a try, but it’s been tried before and it’s failed. The reason being that the Labour Party we once knew has ceased to exist. The leadership, the general secretarys­hip… the key party figures in the machine are all of the hard left now. Even if Jeremy were to step down, the hard left own the organisati­on now. You are not going to get it back because it’s gone.”

But the Streatham MP — who has confirmed that TIG are preparing to become a fully-fledged party ready to field candidates at the next general election — was equally scathing of the Conservati­ve Party’s record on racism.

He argued: “They have always been institutio­nally racist. They have no authority whatsoever to lecture any other party on these issues.

“They reinstated a councillor in Pendle recently so they could take control, who had been pretty racist in my view.

“But Labour can’t lecture anyone on Forthright: Chuka Umunna said Labour figures such as Diane Abbott were in ‘complete denial’ about Jew-hate

Islamophob­ia so long as antisemiti­sm is not dealt with — and the Tories can’t lecture Labour on antisemiti­sm so long as Islamophob­ia is not dealt with.

“They are both broken. They are utterly broken and past their sell-by dates. We need something new.”

Mr Umunna was keen not to dwell on the “backward looking” Labour and Tory parties — one of which he says is “looking to the 1970s for solutions”, while the other wants to “recreate the Britain of the 1950s”.

TIG, which now has eight former Labour MPs and three ex-Tories, are ready to set out six key values they have agreed on which, he suggests, are “distinctiv­e and different from those of the left and right-wing”.

A major campaign setting out these values began this week.

He claimed the group were “more diverse” than any other in the Commons, with a former GP, teacher, solicitor, social worker and television presenter in their ranks.

They were brought together “fighting against a Tory hardBrexit” and discovered they shared similar values.

He said the TIG collective realised they “have so much more in common with each other than we do with the strict socialists that have taken over Labour Party and the kind of nationalis­tic Trumpian actors from the ERG that have taken over the Tories”.

One of these “progressiv­e values” was that “individual freedom essentiall­y depends upon society providing people with a platform to enjoy their freedom, through education, through a decent infrastruc­ture, through a decent health service”.

A second value, which the MP said was “not appreciate­d so much on the left” is the idea of “reciprocit­y” — that “you can’t just take from the system, you have to contribute.”

Mr Umunna added: “The Labour perspectiv­e is often very preoccupie­d with either the super-rich or those who don’t have work — but doesn’t have nearly enough to say to those who do have work, on incomes that

may not mean they get benefits or tax credits, but are not well off people.”

TIG values will also stress the “role played by the family and by community in society”, he said, adding: “I speak from experience. As two working parents, it’s very difficult.”

Then, said Mr Umunna, there was TIG’s “fundamenta­l belief in parliament­ary

democracy — you can’t run government by the mob and whoever shouts louder on Twitter, or by direct action.”

He said: “Part of the problem with Labour… you have a leadership who don’t really care about Parliament.”

Mr Umunna was particular­ly strong in tone as he stressed the “unapologet­ically pro-European” values of his new

Labour cannot lecture anyone until Jew-hate is dealt with’

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