WHO IS SAYING WHAT: A YEAR OF FRONTBENCH TWEETING ABOUT A CERTAIN MIDDLE-EAST COUNTRY
DURING the 11-day conflict in May, Labour politicians were urged by anti-racism campaigners not to stoke divisions amid a surge in antisemitic abuse both online and in the streets in Britain.
Mainstream’s analysis shows that while many frontbenchers used their tweets to condemn violence on both sides, others condemned Israel and posted regular tallies of the Palestinian ‘death toll’. Some of the language used was highly emotive, with Israel being accused of “apartheid”, of being “inhumane” and committing “systemic injustice” and “brutal crimes against humanity”.
On 19 May, Labour’s Shadow Railways Minister Tanmanjeet Singh Dhesi posted: “Nub of #Israel #Palestine issue is colonial-era mindset of a gradual land grab, forced evictions, shameless flouting of international law, suppression and humiliation of a people. But need now is immediate end to bloodshed and deliver aid to those in inhumanely blockaded #Gaza.”
The post was retweeted on 6 June by Shadow Community Cohesion Minister Naz Shah, who was briefly suspended and given a formal warning in 2016 for sharing an antisemitic post in “ignorance”.
On 14 May, Ms Shah shared a tweet from @hzomlot that included the hashtag #ApartheidIsrael.
The tweet said: “What I hear from our people in Gaza is horrific. Israel’s aggression is beyond barbaric and must stop immediately!”
On 13 May, Shadow Bus Minister Sam Tarry posted that more than 80 people had been killed in the “devastating siege of #Gaza” with “promises of further air strikes and a possible ground invasion by Israel’s military”.
He added: “The UK government must urgently call on the Netanyahu administration to end its bombardment and to stop further bloodshed.” The tweet made no mention of a bombardment of rockets by Hamas into Israeli cities.
On 18 May, Marsha de Cordova, MP for Battersea, re-tweeted a post from Al Jazeera English which included the death and injury tally of Palestinians since the “Israeli bombardment
began”. There was no corresponding information about the death and injuries in Israel.
On the same day she shared a post from Unite International that expressed “solidarity with Palestinians on general strike
... protesting at massacres committed by Israel in #Gaza”. It included the hashtags: #FreePalestine #GazaUnderAttack. At the time of the posts, Ms de Cordova was the Shadow Equalities Minister, she resigned in September 2021. The resignation was unconnected to the tweets about Gaza.
Shadow Higher Education Minister Matt Western tweeted on 12 May: “Israeli air strikes have now killed 50+ Palestinians (14 children) and fasting worshippers were terrorised at the AlAqsa Mosque. Int. law is again being broken and Israel must halt provocations and forced evictions in E. Jerusalem. We need urgent de-escalation. #SheikhJarrah.”
Rosena Allin-Khan is Labour’s Shadow Secretary of State for Mental Health. On 11 May, she posted: “Palestinian children have been killed by Israeli air strikes on Gaza. Enough is enough. Verbal condemnation is not sufficient. How many more children must die before world leaders collectively do something to stop this atrocity?”
On 14 May, Labour’s Shadow Deputy Leader Afzal Khan posted: “I’ll be speaking at the Manchester #Nakba73 commemoration tomorrow afternoon …. The UK government must take urgent action against Israel’s assault on the besieged Gaza Strip and its brutal crimes against humanity. The killing of civilians needs to end #ExistResistReturn”
On 16 February, Shadow Justice Secretary Alex Cunningham shared a tweet from former Labour MP Richard Burden stating that the Knesset was debating the issue. It added: “That it should even be treated as a matter for debate is horrifying.”
A second post from Mr Burden re-tweeted by the frontbencher the same day said: “Awaiting for a political decision. A political decision on a health emergency. Grotesque.”