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I couldn't put a Labour poster in my window, I didn't want my neighbours thinking I condoned antisemitism

Martin Bright describes how Jew hate drove him from the party

July 19, 2018 09:18
Labour poster in window 2017
2 min read

At the last local elections, I just couldn’t face putting a Labour poster in my window. I didn’t want my neighbours in North London to think I condoned the antisemitism that was eating the party from the inside.

Shortly afterwards, I cancelled my Labour membership. I no longer felt comfortable funding hate, while playing no active part in my local party to oppose it.
For a while, I have saluted those who did stay to fight the rising tide of extremist politics in the Labour movement, but the latest developments make me question how anyone of good conscience can remain.

This week, the Labour Party took the extraordinary step of publicly announcing itself as a party that will tolerate antisemitism as defined by internationally accepted norms.

Its refusal fully to accept the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance working definition of antisemitism is an act of open hostility towards the Jewish community.