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By
Norman Lebrecht, Norman Lebrecht

Analysis

A fear of foreigners pervades the Daily Mail

October 3, 2013 09:08
1 min read

A man called Levy was accused this week of questioning the loyalty of Jews by calling a politician’s immigrant father “the man who hated Britain”.

Before you get all upset, let me point out that this is party conference season when the English language is blitzed by hyperbole and few want to be held the morning after to their slogans of the night before. (Hardworking families: what are they, when they’re at home?)

Those caveats aside, Geoffrey Levy’s slur in the Daily Mail against Ralph Miliband, father of the Labour Party leader, is conceivably the ugliest lie promulgated by any British newspaper against a political party since the Mail itself published the fake Zinoviev Letter that cost Labour the 1924 election. Then, as now, the Mail accused Labour of disloyalty to Britain. Then, as now, it knew what it was doing. Then, as now, it saw no reason to apologise.

Quoting a diary written by Miliband senior when he was 17, Levy constructed a child-scaring bogey figure of a fanatical Marxist who wanted to destroy the country that had given him refuge. Levy, in his third sentence, identified Ralph Miliband as “a Jewish immigrant”. Three days later, defending the article, the Mail made no mention of Miliband’s ethnicity. Being Jewish is not, ostensibly, a reason for contemplating treason. In a heavily-spun right of reply, Ed Miliband argued that it was wrong to drag a politician’s family into the public arena, “questioning the patriotism of a man who risked his life for our country”. He fastidiously declined to point out that Lord Rothermere, the Mail’s owner, inherited the title from a press baron who had his picture proudly taken with Adolf Hitler.