Become a Member
Opinion

The new definition of Antisemitism should be used to investigate Jenny Tonge

February 9, 2017 17:14
2 min read

Last week, the Community Security Trust released its annual report on hate crimes against Jews in 2016. It found a record high of antisemitic incidents in Britain, with no discernible reason for this spike.

In response to the release of this report, Baroness Jenny Tonge asked rhetorically if it had been considered that hate crimes committed against Jews were because of Israeli government actions – and suggested that if the Jewish community spoke up against Israel it would lessen the amount of hate crimes.

This is hardly an aberrant comment from this source. In 2015, she tabled a written question in the House of Lords asking whether the British government would press Jewish “faith leaders” to condemn Israeli policy.

According to the definition of antisemitism officially adopted by the British Government in December last year, “Holding Jews collectively responsible for actions of the state of Israel” is a contemporary example of how antisemitism manifests itself in public life.