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Gideon Falter

ByGideon Falter, BY Gideon Falter

Opinion

Sitting MPs who campaigned for Jeremy Corbyn have many questions to answer

The reaction of most Labour MPs to antisemitism over the past five years has been deafening silence

December 3, 2020 11:34
Steve Reed MP GettyImages-157453692
2 min read

There’s an old joke in South African circles that it’s impossible these days to find anyone who was on the wrong side of the fight against apartheid. As so often with campaigns against evil in which good eventually triumphs, everybody who was there at the time later insists they were always on the right side. So it is with the Labour Party.

Yet, unlike the principled few who resigned from the party in disgust, or the Jewish MPs who were hounded out, those who remained have questions to answer.

Steve Reed is one of them. Last week he told the JC the antisemitism problem laid bare by the EHRC’s report was “nothing short of horrific and contemptible”. But last year he insisted the problem was confined to a “tiny minority”.

Similarly, he now says that “I was an ally 100 per cent”. But when Luciana Berger saw no choice but to flee from Labour and hoped others might join her in solidarity, he resolutely tweeted: “I’ve been a member of the Labour Party for 40 years this year, and I’m looking forward to being a member for the next 40 years.” That’s a strange way to show you’re an ally.