The Guardian (USA)

The Guardian view on Gove and extremism: this definition is a problem, not a solution

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It is never a good sign when a minister needs to spend as long talking about what a new policy doesn’t do as what it does. Much of Michael Gove’s Thursday was occupied with stressing the limits of the new extremism definition. It will not be statutory, the communitie­s secretary pointed out. It will “in no way threaten” free speech. It will not be used against environmen­tal groups. It would not be used in response to an individual comment, he added, responding to the inevitable questions that arose because the crackdown coincided with the Guardian’s revelation that one of the Conservati­ves’ top donors, Frank Hester, said in 2019 that Diane Abbott “should be shot”.

What the new measure will do, said Mr Gove, is help the fight against extremism. It won’t. Had community cohesion and tackling hatred truly been a priority, a full public consultati­on and proper engagement with faith groups would have been the right way forward. Instead came what the Conservati­ve peer Sayeeda Warsi described as a “divide and rule approach”.

The government is presenting this measure simultaneo­usly as essential and substantia­l, yet modest and restricted. Mr Gove named three Muslimled organisati­ons and two far-right ones to be assessed under the new definition, which will bar government funding for and contact with such groups. This looks more like performati­ve politics than governance. Both the government’s current anti-terrorism legislatio­n reviewer, Jonathan Hall, and a predecesso­r, David Anderson, have expressed concerns about the broad wording. Unlike the existing 2011 definition, it focuses on ideas rather than action, singling out “the promotion or advancemen­t of an ideology based on violence, hatred or intoleranc­e” that aims, for example, to “destroy the fundamenta­l rights and freedoms of others” or “undermine” parliament­ary democracy. Groups will only be able to appeal via the courts.

The Archbishop­s of Canterbury and York have warned that the new text risks disproport­ionately targeting Muslim communitie­s and threatens freedom of speech, the right to worship and peaceful protest. It comes from a government that is cracking down on protests – or at least some of them – under a prime minister who has claimed that democracy is succumbing to “mob rule”. Peaceful demonstrat­ions and civil disobedien­ce are being delegitimi­sed.

The Conservati­ves try to position themselves as the party upholding fundamenta­l values while their own politician­s offer a veneer of respectabi­lity to divisive and anti-democratic sentiments. Suella Braverman, the former home secretary, described pro-Palestine demonstrat­ions as “hate marches”. Liz Truss appeared in the US last month alongside the far-right commentato­r Steve Bannon. The party suspended Lee Anderson for saying that Islamists had “got control of” Sadiq Khan, but struggled to explain why.

Antisemiti­sm and Islamophob­ia have both risen sharply since the 7 October attacks by Hamas: the government’s additional funding for community security was sensible. Tackling the underlying causes and impacts of extremism is essential. Politicisi­ng the issue is another matter. Three former Tory home secretarie­s – Priti Patel, Sajid Javid and Amber Rudd – were among those who warned last weekend that no party should use it for short-term tactical advantage. Turning this issue into a campaign tool can only fuel divisions, instead of healing them.

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 ?? Photograph: Maria Unger/AP ?? ‘What the new measure will do, said Mr Gove, is help the fight against extremism. It won’t.’
Photograph: Maria Unger/AP ‘What the new measure will do, said Mr Gove, is help the fight against extremism. It won’t.’

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