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Why I'm voting tactically for Labour

'I don’t fear the antisemitism of the left nearly as much as I do the antisemitism of the right.'

December 3, 2019 09:49
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3 min read
 
 

I usually vote Labour. Except in European elections where there’s proportional representation. Then I vote Green.

My parents were active in the Labour Party. Growing up in Hendon, I was stuffing leaflets in letter-boxes while still in short trousers. My parents believed in social justice, the welfare state, public ownership of basic utilities and internationalism: the common good.

I was suckled on those values.  They never felt in conflict with my Jewishness. Indeed as I got older it seemed to me that it’s what Judaism was all about: kindness to the stranger; treating one’s neighbour as one would like to be treated oneself; siding with the underdog. With our history of persecution it was natural to identify with least powerful, the most vulnerable. And wasn’t it the Labour movement – the dockers and the building workers – who defended the Jewish East End against the fascists at the battle of Cable Street?

I was drawn to Socialist Zionism and the great experiment of the kibbutzim which were the primary building block of the new nation. I hero-worshipped Ben Gurion and his vision of a strong Israel at peace with its neighbours, as a democratic state of all of its citizens.