The Jewish Chronicle

Starmer brings back Smeeth

- BY LEE HARPIN POLITICAL EDITOR

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer picked JLM vice-chair Ruth Smeeth — who suffered repeated antisemiti­c abuse during Jeremy Corbyn’s time as leader — to introduce this week’s conference speech in which he repeated his pledge to ‘root out’ antisemiti­sm

V SIR KEIR Starmer has used his debut party conference speech as Labour leader to praise the former MP Ruth Smeeth as someone who would “exemplify the values” of his party.

In a move clearly designed to emphasise his commitment to removing the stain of antisemiti­sm from the party, Ms Smeeth, the current vice-chair of the Jewish Labour Movement, was chosen to give an introducti­on to Sir Keir ahead of his speech in Doncaster on Tuesday.

Due to the pandemic Labour had scrapped its physical conference — but held a virtual event this week instead.

Ms Smeeth — who found herself subjected to vicious social media attacks from Jeremy Corbyn supporters after her confrontat­ion with the subsequent­ly expelled activist Mark Wadsworth at the launch of the Chakrabart­i report into anti-Jewish racism — said: “It has been difficult to be Jewish in the Labour Party in recent years.

“We lost too many friends who were bullied out of the party and too many people who have been hurt by visceral racism that should have no place in our movement.”

The former Stoke on Trent North MP, who had accepted that Brexit would happen ahead of the last election despite Labour’s unclear message on the critical issue, added that she was convinced Sir Keir was “determined to eradicate the stain of antisemiti­sm – no if’s, no buts”.

As he appeared at the lectern to deliver his speech, Sir Keir praised Ms Smeeth’s “powerful introducti­on”, adding he knew “how hard the last few years have been.

“You exemplify the values I want the Labour Party to stand for.”

In his speech, Sir Keir set out to differenti­ate his leadership from that of Mr Corbyn. He said: “I promised on my first day as leader that I would root out antisemiti­sm.

“We are making progress and we will root it out once and for all.”

Sir Keir also implicitly attacked Mr Corbyn over his lack of patriotism and criticised the former leader’s supporters for blaming the electorate for Labour’s failure at the last election.

He said: “When you lose an election in a democracy, you deserve to. You don’t look at the electorate and ask them: ‘what were you thinking?’ You look at yourself and ask: ‘what were we doing?’”

He also sought to contrast his reputation for competence as a former head of the Crown Prosecutio­n Service, in contrast to Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s record.

A JLM spokespers­on later said they were “proud” to see Ms Smeeth introduce Sir Keir’s keynote speech. “It’s another clear signal he means business when he says he wants to tackle the antisemiti­sm problem.”

When you lose an election in a democracy, you deserve to’

Jewish businessma­n Sir David Garrard — previously one of Labour’s most generous private donors — signalled last weekend he was ready to rejoin the party, having quit in 2018 over its antisemiti­sm crisis.

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