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Geoffrey Alderman

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Geoffrey Alderman,

Geoffrey Alderman

Opinion

Corbyn win could have benefit

July 30, 2015 13:26
2 min read

Although a lifelong trade-unionist, I have never been wealthy enough to afford the luxury of indulging in a socialist mindset. Neither am I a member of the Labour party. But the present kerfuffle over the party leadership interests me a great deal. At the July 20 "hustings" , the four leadership contenders addressed a Jewish audience. That this should have been felt necessary is itself of some significance. Although the UK's Jewish vote is not large, it is strategically concentrated. Had a handful of "Jewish" constituencies not turned so heavily to the Tories last May, David Cameron might not now be prime minister - or (more likely) he might now be in office but not in power.

Labour lost the election for many reasons . But it's likely that its then Jewish leader, Ed Miliband, was also a liability. "How Jewish is he," one Labour stalwart asked me. "Is he a Zionist?" In 2013, Miliband insisted that he was (after a fashion) but it took him just 24 hours to back-pedal furiously, his office insisting that he had "not used the word Zionist to describe himself" - which was indeed the case. Why did he back-pedal so furiously? Because in most Labour circles Zionism is a dirty word. The only Jews now welcome within these circles are anti-Zionist Jews, willing to stand shoulder to shoulder with anti-Zionist non-Jews in demonstrations against the Jewish state.

Now, in the contest for the Labour leadership, there enters Jeremy Corbyn, who is positively brimming with socialist credentials. Grammar-school educated himself, he would deny such an opportunity to others. He supports Sinn Fein, the political wing of the Irish Republican Army. He's a long-time member of another lost cause, the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament. He opposes austerity. And he supports - and is indeed a patron of - the Palestine Solidarity Campaign.

Corbyn's quest for the Labour leadership is to be welcomed. For a start, it has crystallised and forced into the open a structural division within Labour ranks, between the pragmatists, (Blairites of various hues) who argue that Labour's overwhelming priority is to win back lost voters; and the idealists, who insist that the winning of votes is less important than the purification and preservation of the party's socialist credentials. An important and influential section of the Labour movement has always believed that power corrupts, and that winning power is less important than spreading an unadulterated socialist message. It is to this tradition that Corbyn belongs, as did Michael Foot and Aneurin Bevan.