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Actually dealing with Labour antisemitism would endanger Jeremy Corbyn's lifelong dream

Outgoing JLM director Ella Rose says genuine action could mean expelling some of the Labour leader's allies

November 21, 2018 10:27
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GLASGOW, SCOTLAND - AUGUST 22: Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn meets with asylum seeker brothers Somer Umeed and Areeb Umeed at Possilpark Parish Church on August 22, 2018 in Glasgow, Scotland. Jeremy Corbyn met with asylum seeker families in Glasgow threatened with eviction by Serco and called for such services to be delivered by public bodies. (Photo by Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images)
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In 1923, shortly after Poale Zion’s 1920 affiliation to the Labour Party, Leah L’Estrange-Malone became Chair of Poale Zion.

A former Communist Party member, she was the first woman to lead what is now know as the Jewish Labour Movement. Among her various achievements, she successfully persuaded the Labour Party to adopt a policy of increasing the accessibility of birth control. I have no doubt that as a Jewish woman in 1923 she faced antisemitism, misogyny and sexism.

The question therefore is why countless Jewish women have had the same experiences nearly 100 years later?

The last few years have been exceptionally hard for Jews within the Labour Party. Within every section of the party, from constituencies (CLPs) to the Parliamentary Labour Party, antisemitism has been given a free pass — time and time again.