The Jewish Chronicle

Zionist world domination is no trope, Mr Corbyn

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NEVER MIND he didn’t give an apology. Who’d have believed that he meant it? No. This was the moment in the Andrew Neil interview when even the comrades from Jewish Voice for Labour must have secretly winced before pulling themselves together and writing a letter to The Guardian. It came when Neil put to Mr Corbyn that the Chief Rabbi had not been wrong to dispute Labour’s claims that antisemiti­sm in the party had been dealt with. The example Neil gave was one reported here in the JC last year. The council candidate for a ward in Liverpool, Liam Moore, had tweeted “Rothschild­s Zionists run Israel and world government­s”.

When this became news Mr Moore (who had a history of such utterances) according to the local constituen­cy Labour Party “apologised for past tweets that have been inappropri­ate. Liam then offered his resignatio­n as candidate for NG. This was refused, unanimousl­y, by branch members.”

The Zionist world conspiracy is not an “antisemiti­c trope”, as Mr Cobyn said it was. It’s the full Monty. Until pretty recently it was the more or less undisputed province of neo-Nazi groups, and would generally appear amid links to Holocaust denial literature and admiring biographie­s of the Fuhrer. These same sites would also feature material on the biological inferiorit­y of non-whites and the dangers of miscegenat­ion.

Can you imagine — even you, dear Jewish Voice for Labour — that same Liverpool Labour Party refusing the resignatio­n of someone who had opposed race-mixing and endorsed replacemen­t theory? Can you imagine them describing such sentiments as “inappropri­ate”?

Mr Moore remains in Labour a year later. A year.

A fifth of the time that Labour plans to take for its peaceful socialist revolution and they can’t chuck one racist out of the party.

Neil to Corbyn: Let me ask you this. Is it antisemiti­c to say Rothschild’s Zionists run Israel and world government­s?

JC: In the Chakrabart­i Report we asked that people did not use comparison­s about conspiraci­es, not use…

AN: Is that antisemiti­c?

JC: …because in the belief of Shami, and I support her on this in that report, that can be constructe­d as being an antisemiti­c statement and therefore — and therefore should not be —

AN: Right, but let’s just get it clear. I asked you — I gave you a specific quote. Are the words “Rothschild’s Zionists run Israel and world government”, is that antisemiti­c?

JC: It should not be used and it is.

AN: But you can’t say it’s antisemiti­c?

JC: Look, I just said that it should not be used. Finally, painfully, he allowed that it was “an antisemiti­c trope”. Neil banked that and asked,

Andrew Neil grills Jeremy Corbyn so if the Chief Rabbi was wrong, why was Moore still in the party? After a short eternity of bluster (the transcript makes almost unbearable reading) Corbyn finally answered “Look, I don’t know the process that is involved with him.”

The man, a Labour council candidate, tweets out neo-Nazi conspiracy theories about Jews, is then endorsed as a candidate by his local party, his anti-semitism is described as “inappropri­ate”, a year later is still in the party and the party leader and putative prime minister, under intense criticism for just this, says “Look, I don’t know the process that is involved with him.” And, of course, there are plenty of others.

This week somebody who I quite like told me that maybe the problem is that people unspecifie­d seem to seek “special status” for racism aimed at them and perhaps that’s the problem.

We know who the people are. As for “special status”? I should cocoa. We have activists attempting to purge entire universiti­es of micro-aggression­s and cultural appropriat­ion because of their racist or colonial implicatio­ns, but if you publish that Jews seek to rule the world, you get told off in today’s Labour Party for being “inappropri­ate”.

Inappropri­ate is farting in a lift. Inappropri­ate is asking an unpregnant woman if she’s expecting. As the great historian Norman Cohn said of the Protocols of the Elders of Zion, accusing Jews of a massive world conspiracy is a warrant for genocide.

Come on Jenny Manson, Naomi Wimborne Idrissi, Jonathan Rosenhead, Miriam Margolyes and the rest of you in the Asajew roundrobin­ocracy — explain. Why in an “anti-racist party” led by a man who “abhors all forms of racism” it was the Jewish MPs Luciana Berger and Louise Ellmann who were the targets of their Liverpool comrades’ venom, and not the anti-semite?

Apology? You can keep it.

 ?? PHOTO: BBC ??
PHOTO: BBC
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