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Starmer still has so much more to do

Keir Starmer has made a good start in ridding Labour of its extremism, but two Commons speeches this week showed what remains to be done, writes Lord Austin

October 2, 2020 12:47
Ian Austin
3 min read

When it comes to antisemitism, Keir Starmer is clearly a big improvement on Jeremy Corbyn.

He’ll be judged by actions not words, but he promised on day one to tear anti-Jewish racism out by its roots and engaged with the community’s leadership and Labour Friends of Israel in a way his predecessor never would. 

These are good steps in the right direction but it is not enough just to say you are dealing with members responsible for the worst examples of antisemitism. As my organisation Mainstream pointed out when setting tests for the new Labour leader earlier this year, Labour will only be ready for government when the attention given to individual foreign policy issues is proportionate and the party is an honest broker on Israel-Palestine.

Judging by speeches by shadow ministers Stephen Kinnock and Naz Shah in a House of Commons debate last week, Labour still has a long way to go. Stephen Kinnock, a Shadow Foreign Office Minister, secured yet another debate on the “settlement and annexation of the Occupied Palestinian territories” — even though annexation plans were dropped as part of the historic peace agreements between Israel, the UAE and Bahrain.