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Chief rabbi warns Labour: don't use antisemitism inquiry as sticking plaster Chief rabbi warns Labour: don't use antisemitism inquiry as sticking plaster
(4 months later)
Labour has a severe problem with antisemitism that will get worse if the party’s inquiry into the issue is used as “sticking plaster” to placate voters, the chief rabbi has warned.Labour has a severe problem with antisemitism that will get worse if the party’s inquiry into the issue is used as “sticking plaster” to placate voters, the chief rabbi has warned.
Ephraim Mirvis criticised the “poisonous invective” and “politics of distortion” of some members of the party and said leader Jeremy Corbyn must take decisive action.Ephraim Mirvis criticised the “poisonous invective” and “politics of distortion” of some members of the party and said leader Jeremy Corbyn must take decisive action.
Claims by allies of Corbyn that the allegations are a smear were “disheartening”, Mirvis said in an article for the Daily Telegraph.Claims by allies of Corbyn that the allegations are a smear were “disheartening”, Mirvis said in an article for the Daily Telegraph.
Related: Labour’s antisemitism row may be drama, but it’s no crisis | Steve Richards
Corbyn set up an independent investigation into antisemitism and other forms of racism within Labour as the row over the handling of controversial comments by prominent figures continued to engulf the party.Corbyn set up an independent investigation into antisemitism and other forms of racism within Labour as the row over the handling of controversial comments by prominent figures continued to engulf the party.
The chief rabbi wrote: “If this inquiry turns out to be no more than a sticking plaster, designed to placate and diffuse until after the elections this week, the problem will surely get worse and not better.The chief rabbi wrote: “If this inquiry turns out to be no more than a sticking plaster, designed to placate and diffuse until after the elections this week, the problem will surely get worse and not better.
“Jeremy Corbyn has stated that his party ‘will not tolerate antisemitism in any form’ and I very much hope that this inquiry will deliver on that pledge and be followed by decisive action.“Jeremy Corbyn has stated that his party ‘will not tolerate antisemitism in any form’ and I very much hope that this inquiry will deliver on that pledge and be followed by decisive action.
“All political parties share in the responsibility to rid our society of antisemitism but we cannot achieve that objective with political posturing or empty promises of action never to be fulfilled.”“All political parties share in the responsibility to rid our society of antisemitism but we cannot achieve that objective with political posturing or empty promises of action never to be fulfilled.”
Corbyn has insisted there is not a huge problem with antisemitism in Labour and the issue is limited to a “very small” number of people.Corbyn has insisted there is not a huge problem with antisemitism in Labour and the issue is limited to a “very small” number of people.
At the weekend, the shadow cabinet minister Diane Abbott said it was “a smear to say that the Labour party has a problem with antisemitism” and Unite union leader Len McCluskey said Corbyn was the victim of “a cynical attempt to manipulate antisemitism for political aims” that was “got up by the rightwing press aided and abetted by Labour MPs”.At the weekend, the shadow cabinet minister Diane Abbott said it was “a smear to say that the Labour party has a problem with antisemitism” and Unite union leader Len McCluskey said Corbyn was the victim of “a cynical attempt to manipulate antisemitism for political aims” that was “got up by the rightwing press aided and abetted by Labour MPs”.
Mirvis warned it would be a mistake to treat the problem as a political attack, writing: “There are many people, from all sectors of our society, who are demanding more responsibility, particularly from our politicians, for stamping out racism and antisemitism. The Labour party has a long and proud history of doing precisely that.Mirvis warned it would be a mistake to treat the problem as a political attack, writing: “There are many people, from all sectors of our society, who are demanding more responsibility, particularly from our politicians, for stamping out racism and antisemitism. The Labour party has a long and proud history of doing precisely that.
“Yet, comments from senior and long-standing members of the party, both Jewish and not, show just how severe the problem has now become.“Yet, comments from senior and long-standing members of the party, both Jewish and not, show just how severe the problem has now become.
“Everyone agrees that there must be no place for antisemitism in our politics and I welcome the inquiry recently announced by the party’s leadership. And yet, I would sound an urgent note of caution. In recent days, we have heard antisemitism in the Labour party described variously as ‘a smear’ and as ‘mood music’ being manipulated by political opponents of Jeremy Corbyn.“Everyone agrees that there must be no place for antisemitism in our politics and I welcome the inquiry recently announced by the party’s leadership. And yet, I would sound an urgent note of caution. In recent days, we have heard antisemitism in the Labour party described variously as ‘a smear’ and as ‘mood music’ being manipulated by political opponents of Jeremy Corbyn.
“There has been nothing more disheartening in this story than the suggestion that this is more about politics than about substance. The worst of mistakes, in trying to address this problem would be to treat it as a political attack which requires a political solution.”“There has been nothing more disheartening in this story than the suggestion that this is more about politics than about substance. The worst of mistakes, in trying to address this problem would be to treat it as a political attack which requires a political solution.”
He added: “Zionism is a movement celebrated by people right across the political spectrum, all over the world, and requires no endorsement or otherwise of the particular policies of any Israeli government at any time.He added: “Zionism is a movement celebrated by people right across the political spectrum, all over the world, and requires no endorsement or otherwise of the particular policies of any Israeli government at any time.
“But to those people who have nevertheless sought to redefine Zionism, who vilify and delegitimise it, be under no illusions – you are deeply insulting not only the Jewish community but countless others who instinctively reject the politics of distortion and demonisation.”“But to those people who have nevertheless sought to redefine Zionism, who vilify and delegitimise it, be under no illusions – you are deeply insulting not only the Jewish community but countless others who instinctively reject the politics of distortion and demonisation.”