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Corbyn’s toxic legacy continues to hobble Labour

Ongoing legal battles with former staffers and anti-racism activists are political volcanoes waiting to erupt

June 2, 2023 10:17
Corbyn
3 min read

Litigation, as anyone who has ever been involved with it will know, rapidly acquires a life of its own, and its participants usually find themselves facing enormous costs, emotional and financial, as well as a vast expenditure of time.

You’d be hard-pressed to find a better example of this than the long-running saga of the cases brought by Labour Party staffers and members over the leaking of an internal report about its handling of antisemitism in that not-so-distant time when Jeremy Corbyn was leader.

The document, it may be recalled, was originally intended to be a submission to the Equality and Human Rights Commission inquiry into the matter, which eventually reported its devastating finding that Labour had breached its duties under the Equality Act in late 2020.

However, it never did go to the EHRC investigators, largely because it was leaked and widely shared on the internet in April that year, soon after Sir Keir Starmer replaced Corbyn. It wasn’t redacted, which meant about 400 names - including many whistleblowers - were made public. Some, who had campaigned bravely to expose Jew-hatred during the Corbyn period, suffered death threats as a result, and were vilified on neo-Nazi websites.