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Board fury over Labour refusal to adopt full IHRA antisemitism definition

TV interviews by Andrew Gwynne and Diane Abbott suggest the party believes it is better placed to define Jew-hate than the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance

May 1, 2018 15:05
Andrew Gwynne, Labour's shadow Communities Secretary
2 min read

The Board of Deputies has expressed its “concern” after Labour’s shadow communities secretary suggested the party was working on a “broader” definition of what constituted antisemitism.

Mr Gwynne had appeared on the BBC’s Andrew Marr show on Sunday to claim Labour was refusing to adopt the full International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance definition of Jew-hate – complete with examples of antisemitism - because “we don’t think these examples go far enough”.

His claims echoed remarks made by Diane Abbott, the Shadow Home Secretary, days earlier. She suggested on ITV’s Good Morning Britain programme that Jeremy Corbyn wanted to “go away and look at” the IHRA definition because of concern that it limited “criticism of the state of Israel”.

In a statement to the JC today, the Board said it believed the “full” IHRA definition – including examples relating to criticism of Israel – “had been adopted in December 2016 and we would be concerned about any suggested regression on that point”.