Become a Member
Opinion

Sectarian politics in the UK could go mainstream

Calling them ‘Gaza independents’ obscures the truth: they are pushing a Muslim political agenda

May 6, 2025 16:19
GettyImages-2153960023.jpg
Sign outside a British polling station for voting during an election
4 min read

You’d expect me to think this, given what I do for a living, but words matter. How we describe something can change entirely the way we think about it. You only have to look at what’s happening in Gaza to see the starkest example of this. For those of us who believe in Israel’s right to defend itself, the current war in Gaza is just that – a war. There are, of course, Israelis and supporters of Israel who disagree with the continuing operation, but they don’t consider it illegitimate, rather misguided.

But Israel’s enemies don’t call it a war. The label they have attached to it is genocide. And from the moment that word was used, everything changed. Or, to be more accurate, perceptions changed. Nothing has actually changed. Israel is not committing a genocide; the IDF rules of engagement remain in place. That has become almost irrelevant, however, in terms of how Israel is portrayed and regarded by those who know nothing about the reality, and form their opinions based only on headlines and propaganda.

Which brings us to last week’s local elections. Buried under the undoubted significance of the main story – the rise of Reform – lies another development which is potentially of far greater concern: the rise of sectarian politics and the success of the “Gaza independents”. The results confirmed that the trend of the general election was here to stay. A series of independent Muslim candidates running on platforms to appeal only to fellow Muslim voters won.

Candidates like 18-year-old Maheen Kamran, who took Burnley Central East with 38 per cent of the vote, beating Reform on 30 per cent. Labour could manage only third with 14 per cent – down from 49 per cent in 2021. Ms Kamran wants “segregated areas” to prevent “free mixing”, as she puts it, between men and women. Her fellow independent Usman Arif, who left Labour over the Gaza war, joins her on the Lancashire County Council. Another independent, Azhar Ali, was elected in Pendle. Ali was dumped as Labour’s candidate in last year’s Rochdale by-election after he had been recorded making insinuations about “certain Jewish quarters” in the media and had said Israel “allowed” the October 7 massacres to happen to justify a war in Gaza.

Topics:

Gaza