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Opinion

We will never get a real apology from Corbyn

Even now, mainstream society doesn’t appreciate what Jewish people went through then

April 4, 2023 15:25
Jeremy Corbyn and Diane Abbott on October 10, 2019 (Darren Staples/Getty)
3 min read

As the kind of person who says sorry when someone bumps into me, it is my experience that one of the most common things people do really badly is apologise. We say sorry when it is not needed and not when it is; we really get it wrong when we say it under duress, or don’t really understand what we are saying it for.

There is a reason there are so many pages online devoted to executing the perfect apology. And most of us can probably count on one hand the amount of times we have been on the receiving end of one.

Last year, Jeremy Corbyn was asked to apologise for his 2020 statement that claims of antisemitism under his leadership had been “dramatically overstated”. When he refused, Sir Keir Starmer removed the whip. Last week he banned him from standing for the party.

One former senior official argued afterwards that Corbyn’s response to the Equality and Human Rights Commission’s report had been “spot on” and was “misrepresented in the media and by critics”. Corbyn’s supporters have been adamant that he offered an appropriate apology.