Britain’s Labour Party will struggle to erase its moral stain

It identifies a culture “which, at best, did not do enough to prevent anti-Semitism and, at worst, could be seen to accept it.”

By Melanie Phillips, ISRAEL HAYOM

The report of an 18-month inquiry into anti-Semitism in Britain’s Labour Party has now been published. Almost instantly, it produced a dramatic and unexpected result.

The Equalities and Human Rights Commission, which conducted the inquiry, has thrown the book at Labour over its handling of the anti-Jewish bigotry in its ranks under its previous hard-left leader, Jeremy Corbyn.

It has found that the party illegally harassed and discriminated against Jews, breaking equality laws.

It identifies a culture within the party “which, at best, did not do enough to prevent anti-Semitism and, at worst, could be seen to accept it.” Despite some recent improvements, it says, Labour must do more if it is going to regain the trust of the Jewish community, the public and many of its members.

Three hours after the report was published, Corbyn was suspended from the party and had the Labour whip removed.

This was all the more remarkable since shortly before that, Labour’s current leader, Sir Keir Starmer, repeatedly ducked the question of whether he would now expel his predecessor from the party. He replied that the report had highlighted a “collective failure of leadership,” rather than identifying Corbyn by name, and that it was “incumbent on all of us to accept the findings … and apologize.”

Soon afterwards, however, Starmer reversed course after Corbyn himself had doubled down, claiming that his team had “acted to speed up, not hinder the process” of investigating anti-Semitism complaints, and that the scale of the problem had been “dramatically overstated for political reasons by our opponents inside and outside the party.”

Since the report had identified as an offense the patently unjustified claim that false complaints of anti-Semitism were being used to smear the party, Starmer may have realized he had little choice but to suspend his predecessor.

The inquiry examined in-depth 70 complaints of anti-Semitism made between 2016 and 2019, but many more were submitted. It found anti-Semitic tropes such as Jewish people being a “fifth column” or controlling or manipulating the political process, likening Israel’s policies to those of Hitler or accusing the “Israel lobby” of a smear campaign to stigmatize critics of Israel as anti-Semitic. These, says the report, were but the tip of the iceberg.

It thus vindicates all those who fought bitter battles to expose this culture of Jew-hatred in the party, and were themselves viciously harassed and victimized for doing so and subjected to further anti-Jewish attacks.

There is no reason to doubt Starmer’s sincerity in saying that Labour had “failed Jewish people” and pledging to eradicate its toxic culture of anti-Semitism. But anyone who imagines that enacting the report’s procedural recommendations will solve the problem of anti-Jewish prejudice in the Labour Party – let alone on the left in general – is sorely mistaken.

Only this week it was revealed that the party leadership had reprimanded Labour MP Stephen Kinnock for accusing Israel in a House of Commons debate about the situation on the “West Bank” of behavior “tantamount to profiting from the proceeds of crime” and calling on the United Kingdom to “ban all products that originate from Israeli settlements in the occupied territories.”

Kinnock was given a dressing down for language felt to represent a disproportionate fixation with Israel. His words also combined this with a whiff of old-fashioned anti-Jewish prejudice by implying that Israel was financially benefiting from oppression.

This illustrates a problem that even the moderate Starmer may not appreciate. Much of the bigotry against Jews expressed by Labour members is tied up with the demonization and delegitimization of Israel.

However, there is general bafflement in Britain over the association of anti-Israel and anti-Jewish sentiment, with a widespread belief going way beyond the Labour Party that the claim of anti-Semitism is being used to stifle legitimate criticism of Israel.

This in turn is fueled by widespread confusion and ignorance over what anti-Semitism actually is.

In the United States, a recent poll published by the American Jewish Committee produced the disturbing finding that nearly half of those questioned weren’t sure what anti-Semitism was and almost a quarter had never even come across the term.

Such findings would almost certainly be replicated in Britain. On both sides of the Atlantic, poor knowledge of the singular history of the Jewish people means zero understanding of the unique properties of anti-Semitism: its double standards, obsessive nature, disproportionality, systematic lies, imputation of global conspiracy and its belief that the Jews are responsible for all the ills of the world.

And with equally poor knowledge of the reality of life in Israel, Palestinian anti-Semitism and the history of the Jews in the Holy Land, there’s similarly zero understanding that anti-Israel attitudes exhibit exactly the same characteristics.

It can’t be said too often that many people harbor anti-Israel views that are anti-Jewish even though they may be decent folk. Indeed, it is precisely because they are decent folk, motivated by the desire to oppose injustice and persecution across the world, that they are, tragically and perversely, anti-Israel.

With their heads filled by anti-Israel lies, they think that demonizing Israel is evidence of a moral sense. And so, even more appallingly, they think any protests by Jews that this is a form of anti-Semitism are just Jews using the claim of anti-Semitism to sanitize the crimes of Israel.

On both sides of the Atlantic, the major drivers of Israel demonization and delegitimization are the universities. The United States took action to address this last year when President Donald Trump signed an executive order banning anti-Semitic behavior and actions at colleges and universities that receive federal funding.

Further key promoters of this infamy are some of the giant international NGOs such as Amnesty International, Oxfam, Human Rights Watch and others. People assume these to be run by people of conscience committed to relieving poverty and oppression.

At a time of unprecedented loss of trust in politicians and other authority figures, NGOs such as these therefore have a massive influence. They have become, in effect, a secular church. In fact, they often peddle pure poison about Israel, singling it out for wildly unfair and twisted condemnation while sanitizing or ignoring the Palestinians’ murderous targeting of Israeli civilians.

Once again, it’s the Trump administration that is leading the world in trying to tackle this, with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo pushing to brand several of them anti-Semitic and withdraw federal funding from them.

Of course, it’s naive to think that the world’s oldest hatred can ever be eradicated. The best we can hope for is to push it back under its stone. To do that, however, it has to be correctly called out and its proponents treated as social pariahs.

But to do that on the left means progressively minded people must acknowledge that, in this instance, their anti-racism is actually racism, and they are not on the side of the angels at all.

The problem is that the left can never accept that they are not always on the side of virtue. And that’s why the anti-Semitism within the Labour Party, as more generally in progressive circles, is a moral stain that won’t go away.

October 31, 2020 | 1 Comment »

Leave a Reply

1 Comment / 1 Comment

  1. I do think that Sir Keir Starmer, the new Labour leader, is making an honest effort to purge Labor of its anti-Semitism. His decision to suspend former leader Corbyn, who has many supporters in the party apparatus (he couldn’t have become party leader unless that were the case) did show courage.

    One point that everyone is overlooking is that it was probably Corbyn’s antisemitism, not his ambiguous stand on Brexit as he claimed, that caused Labour’s defeat under his leadership. Traditionally, English working class people have been less, not more, antisemitic than their betters. Corbyn and his associates clearly smelled bad to them. For many working-class people in English (half of all Englismen still say they are working class, according to the polls), “Jew” means the owner of the corner grocery store or laundramat, or the local family doctor, not some conspiring financier in London, New York or Tel Aviv. This latter stereo type is found mainly among the “chattering classes” and the civil service. Both of these groups are of mainly upper-class origin.