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Labour has taken a stand with Palestine Action – it must not stop here

If Labour is serious about rebuilding its relationship with Britain’s Jews, it ought to follow through with more concrete steps to show it understands both the scale of the threat and the depth of the Jewish community’s concerns

July 9, 2025 14:30
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Palestine Action has allegedly set up a new recruitment website in the wake of its proscription under UK counter-terror laws (Image: Getty)
2 min read

The Labour government’s decision to proscribe Palestine Action was an act of moral clarity. This is no fringe protest group engaging in civil disobedience – it is a movement defined by harassment, criminal damage, and political intimidation. By banning it, Labour has shown a willingness to confront extremism, even at the risk of alienating voters in constituencies it cannot easily afford to lose. It was the right decision – and it took political courage.

It will take more of that courage to win back the trust of British Jews.

A Jewish Chronicle poll conducted before the ban found that 56% of British Jews believe Labour’s actions in government have made the community less secure. The party now trails not only the Conservatives but also Reform UK in Jewish support.

The reasons for this collapse in trust are not hard to identify. For 21 months, Britain’s streets have been dominated by anti-Israel protests – many of which have spilled into open antisemitism. These demonstrations have often taken place near Jewish homes and synagogues, with little concern for the fear and disruption they cause. Labour should have done more to help ensure that Britain’s Jewish community can lead their communal life without constant harassment. Yvette Cooper’s announcement in March that the government would bring in an amendment to the Crime and Policing Bill to prevent intimidating protests taking place near places of worship was absolutely the right move. But why was such a common-sense policy not adopted much earlier?

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