The Sunday Telegraph

Green Party councillor shouts ‘Allahu Akbar!’

Candidate in Leeds says his victory is to ‘raise voice of Palestine’ after people were ‘let down’ by Labour

- By Camilla Turner and Ben Butcher

‘We will not be silenced. We will raise the voice of Gaza. We will raise the voice of Palestine. Allahu Akbar!’ ‘There is no question Muslim communitie­s’ concerns and anger is translatin­g into real votes. A message has been sent’

A GREEN Party candidate shouted “Allahu Akbar!” after being elected to Leeds city council, while his supporters unfurled a Palestinia­n flag behind him.

Mothin Ali, who won the Gipton and Harehills seat with 3,070 votes, said his election to the council was a “win for the people of Gaza”.

Delivering a victory speech after the result was announced, he said people are “fed up” of being “let down” by a Labour council and concluded by saying: “We will not be silenced. We will raise the voice of Gaza. We will raise the voice of Palestine. Allahu Akbar!”

Mr Ali was one of dozens of candidates around the country who ran on a Gaza ticket and, in doing so, defeated their Labour rival. Meanwhile in Walsall, Naheed Zohra Gultasib has held her seat in the Pleck ward. She was one of six Walsall Labour councillor­s who quit the party in November over Sir Keir Starmer’s refusal to back a ceasefire in Gaza.

“This is for Gaza, this is for Palestine,” Gultasib said in her victory speech, to cheers and chants, as well as murmurs of dismay. “You showed [Labour] that they cannot take your vote for granted.”

Across the country, Labour support plummeted in areas with a high Muslim population, analysis by The Telegraph has found.

The analysis focused on wards in council areas with the highest proportion of Muslim voters – Blackburn, Bradford, Pendle, Oldham and Manchester – showed Labour support dropped by an average of 25 points.

In Pendle, wards with Muslim population­s higher than 10 per cent saw Labour support decline, on average, by 43 per cent. Meanwhile, those with smaller population­s saw support surge by 15 per cent. In Blackburn, support in those Muslim areas fell by 35 per cent. Across all five areas, Muslim areas dropped support by at least 12 per cent.

Sir Keir Starmer faced calls to make policy changes to win back the trust of Muslim voters. It is understood members of his shadow Cabinet will raise the issue with him in the coming days.

Ali Milani, national chairman of Labour Muslim Network, said: “There is no question now that Muslim communitie­s’ concerns and anger is translatin­g into real votes.

“A clear message has been sent in these local and mayoral elections. The concerns we have raised for months have now come to fruition.”

Mr Milani said Labour must now take “extraordin­ary steps” to show “we have learned the lessons and we are seriously committed to rebuilding trust”.

He said: “We need to take a serious leadership role in the UK and abroad in stopping the war and tackling the human rights violations against Palestinia­ns. The Labour Party has to support calls for an immediate arms embargo and support the ICC investigat­ion into war crimes – make it clear that we respect and accept their judgments.

We have to show we are taking Islamophob­ia seriously, in legislatio­n and in our own party structures.”

Polling experts said Muslim voters who turned away from Labour this week would have a “limited impact” on results in the general election.

Chris Hopkins, the political research director at Savanta, said: “Labour’s vote falling away in some Muslim areas shows that the party still has plenty of work to do among some communitie­s over its response to the conflict in Gaza.

“That said, it’s likely to have a limited impact at a general election, when constituen­cies are larger and the vote determines the next government rather than local authority control.”

James Johnson, co-founder of JL Partners and a former Downing Street pollster, said: “The big caveat is that these places tend to be safe Labour seats and the general elections tend to be more about who will be the next prime minister. Those two combined might mean that in seat terms, it doesn’t have a huge effect.”

 ?? ?? Mothin Ali said his election to the council was a ‘win for the people of Gaza’
Mothin Ali said his election to the council was a ‘win for the people of Gaza’

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