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Geoffrey Alderman

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Geoffrey Alderman,

Geoffrey Alderman

Opinion

Do we really need Cameron's Holocaust Commission?

February 7, 2014 15:46
2 min read

Last September, Prime Minister David Cameron launched a Commission on the Holocaust, which Jewish Leadership Council head Mick Davis had graciously consented to chair. Last week, Cameron announced the names of other members of this august body. Top of the list is the actress Helena Bonham Carter, whose maternal grandfather had saved hundreds of Jews during the second world war.

Other commission members include the headmistress of Watford Grammar School, Dame Helena Hyde, the chairman of Arts Council England, Sir Peter Bazalgette, a TV newsreader, Natasha Kaplinsky, who lost family members in the Slonim ghetto, and the first Asian woman to be appointed chief executive of a FTSE 100 and FTSE 250 company, Ruby Mcgregor Smith. Supporting chairman Mick will be his deputy at the JLC, property tycoon Leo Noé, son of Holocaust survivors.

If some detect a slight hint of cynicism on my part, you are not mistaken. I am deeply sceptical as to the whole exercise. But before I lay bare my pessimism for all to see, I need to engage in some further analysis of the membership of Cameron’s Commission and its two “expert groups” (“education” and “commemoration”).

In announcing these memberships, Cameron had the effrontery to claim that not only was the Commission “cross-party” but that it represented “our whole society.” Now it’s true that the Commission includes Education Secretary Michael Gove, Labour Shadow Chancellor Ed Balls and former Lib-Dem deputy leader Simon Hughes. But the idea that it represents “our whole society” is utterly false.

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