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Opinion

Focusing only on Labour whitewashes the antisemitism and racism of other parties

These prejudices are pervasive and no political party is immune to them, writes Jon Lansman, founder of the pro-Corbyn campaign group Momentum

November 20, 2019 17:19
Jon Lansman
3 min read

The media have turned a blind eye to the Conservatives’ antisemitism problem for far too long. The fact that too many politicians are allowed to shine the torch of antiracism only at their political opponents has undermined our collective ability to eradicate it. 

Just yesterday, it was revealed that a Tory candidate claimed events in the Holocaust have been “fabricated” and “exaggerated”. Although he’s been suspended, he will appear on the ballot paper as a Conservative candidate on December 12, which Holocaust survivor Lord Alf Dubs has described as “sickening”.

Another Conservative candidate who described British Jews as “brainwashed extremists” was suspended today.  

But they’re just the tip of the iceberg. In 2014 the Conservative party’s inquiry into their MP who threw a Nazi-themed party and wore a Nazi uniform concluded that his behaviour was not antisemitic. The same year another Conservative MP was forced to quit over referring to someone as a “bloody Jew.” A few years earlier a Conservative student society reportedly sang pro-Holocaust songs on multiple occasions. In a 2017 survey, two in five Conservative supporters polled endorsed at least one antisemitic statement, more than any other mainstream party.