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Opinion

God save our newly crowned King from great British public

The new monarch has always been a steadfast friend of the Jewish community, yet the pressures he will face as he ascends the throne are immense, not least from his subjects

September 22, 2022 10:46
GettyImages-611550270
Britain's Prince Charles attends the funeral of former Israeli president and prime minister Shimon Peres at the Mount Herzl national cemetery in Jerusalem on September 30, 2016. World leaders including US President Barack Obama and Prince Charles were bidding farewell to Israeli ex-prime minister and Nobel Peace Prize winner Shimon Peres as his funeral began under massive security. / AFP / POOL / ABIR SULTAN (Photo credit should read ABIR SULTAN/AFP via Getty Images)
3 min read

On 5 December 2019, about 400 representatives of the Jewish community met the then-Prince Charles. Officially, we were at Buckingham Palace for a pre-Chanukah reception for British Jews. The thoughts of most of the guests, however, were fixed on the general election a week later on 12 December.

A Labour Party led by Jeremy Corbyn could take power within days and fears abounded. Sadly, in my view, it remains controversial on the left to acknowledge that Jewish fears were real. Corbyn’s supporters still insist that antisemitism was “weaponised” by the British right, or Mossad, or both. Conspirators had spread vile lies to sabotage a virtuous movement and smear a Labour leader without “a racist bone in his body”.

If they were capable of changing their minds, the palace reception would have shaken them. A colleague went round the crowded hall talking to directors, authors and actors from the Jewish intelligentsia, who had once found voting Labour as easy as pouring a glass of Rioja.

They knew there was no good outcome, he said. Either Boris Johnson would win and push through a disastrous Brexit, or the Corbynistas, with their dark fantasies of Jewish — sorry, “Zionist” — power, would be in Downing Street. They must choose. They had to say which outcome was worse, which would punch them in the gut harder: Corbyn winning or Johnson winning.

Corbyn, they said, without hesitation.

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Monarchy