Become a Member
Opinion

Labour is now a safe place for Jews

The chair of JLM argues that Keir Starmer has transformed Labour's relationship with the Jewish community

September 26, 2021 19:08
gettyimages-1316626909-640x640.jpeg
2021 UK local elections: Bumper year of elections in Britain after Covid forces delays; ENGLAND: West Midlands: Birmingham: EXT Sir Keir Starmer MP (Labour Leader) along with Liam Byrne MP (Labour candidate for West Midlands Mayor) Woman speaking to Sir Keir Starmer MP (Labour Leader) SOT Starmer and Byrne along Sir Keir Starmer MP (Labour Leader) interview SOT. - I am very clear that the strategy is to get from where we were in 2019 to winning the next general election, that is the sole focus of what I'm doing, what my leadership is doing. It's going to take time, we're making progress, that is good, but I never thought it was going to happen in a year.
2 min read

Today Labour took a huge step towards rebuilding trust with the Jewish community.

Ever since he was elected Labour leader, Keir Starmer has been clear that one of his top priorities has been to root out the antisemitism that had so stained the party under Jeremy Corbyn.

The past five years have been a waking nightmare for the Jewish Labour Movement, our members and Jewish Labour activists across the party.
 
Thanks to Starmer, who has been unbending his commitment to root out antisemtism from Labour, this bad dream is coming to an end.
 
Every conference since 2016, I’ve gone up to the rostrum warn the party that it needed to tackle anti-Jewish racism. JLM put it on notice that trust between it and the Jewish community had broken down because Labour refused to take the issue seriously and refused to expel racists because they were political allies.
 
So we were forced to call in the Equality and Human Rights Commission.
 
And their conclusion was stark: Labour had broken equalities law. It was not a safe place for Jewish members or for those in the party that spoke out against antisemitism.

This was total vindication for JLM and all Jewish Labour members. The EHRC said we were right when they called out racism and - as Starmer made clear when he responded on the day of publication - those who chose to deny it and downplay it are as guilty as the original perpetrators.