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Daniel Finkelstein

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Daniel Finkelstein,

Daniel Finkelstein

Opinion

This Seder was no political error by Corbyn

This is less about antisemitism than it is about rows, writes Daniel Finkelstein.

April 4, 2018 09:12
Jeremy Corbyn pictured in April 2018
2 min read

Did Jeremy Corbyn make a political error having a third-night Seder with Jewdas? By trying to answer this question I think we can learn a lot about the politics of Labour antisemitism. So let’s spend a bit of time picking it apart. Spoiler alert: the answer to the question is going to be no.

Let’s start here. Jeremy Corbyn does not want to have a row about antisemitism. He wants it to go away. This is less about antisemitism than it is about rows. He doesn’t want rows while he is trying to fight a local election.

In the past, he has hasn’t needed to do much because, although it was a nuisance, the rows fizzled out of their own accord. Now the row isn’t fizzling out as quickly so he had to promise to act. And that promise will last as long as the chance of a row lasts.

He can’t stop the rows or be acknowledged as acting without publicly accepting that there is a problem. And therefore he has done so. Allowing everyone else in a leadership position to follow suit. But that all leaves a huge hole. And in that hole sits Jeremy Corbyn himself.