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Opinion

Michael Gove has been British Jewry’s greatest friend in politics

Support for Israel’s existential struggles against totalitarian terrorism became a natural consequence of Gove’s worldview

June 3, 2024 12:48
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Michael Gove (Photo by Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images)
2 min read

Michael Gove’s decision not to seek re-election has prompted wide-ranging assessments of his legacy, as the most consequential politician of our era not to have served as prime minister. It is only right to record that throughout his career Michael has also been Britain’s foremost friend to the Jewish community and supporter of Israel. A prominent Jewish Lord recently quipped that, “in the last 20 years, forging alliances with non-Jews chiefly meant calling Michael Gove.”

Building on the best traditions of Scottish Presbyterian philosemitism, Michael has a deep affinity for Jews, Judaism and Zionism. One story will suffice. The observant husband of a prominent MP was travelling to a weekend retreat in the countryside when Shabbat came in, forcing him to walk the rest of the way. Upon arrival, Gove, whom he had not met before, opened the door and enquired, “Do you keep the other 612?”

Such kinship comes naturally because Gove recognised the “iron-clad law of history” that societies in which Jews do well themselves tend to flourish, and that societies which become unsafe for Jews themselves sink into darkness. As he said in a recent landmark address, in which he described the “shadow” spreading over British streets and British campuses, “A growth in antisemitism is both a precursor of greater hate and an enabler of further extremism.”

Perhaps our country’s clearest-eyed analyst of the wider extremist threat to the British way of life, Gove has consistently maintained admirable moral clarity: The extremists hold moral responsibility for the evil they cause. Western civilisation has a right and an obligation to defend its values. Our enemies’ hatred arises not because of something we have done but because of what we are and because of the values we hold dear. These positions are brilliantly articulated in his still eminently readable 2006 book “Celsius 7/7.”