Daily Mail

A nest of anti-Semites

- By Daniel Martin Policy Editor

THE Mail applauds veteran MP Dame Margaret Hodge for her courage in standing up to Jeremy Corbyn and his Momentum bully-boys over the ugly seam of antiSemiti­sm which runs unchecked through the Labour Party.

By calling Mr Corbyn ‘an anti-Semite and a racist’ over his abject failure to tackle the problem, she invited a deluge of vile personal and racial abuse from Labour supporters – brilliantl­y proving her point.

Dame Margaret faces disciplina­ry action for attacking Mr Corbyn but refuses to be silenced. She knows she speaks for many Jews who today feel despised and threatened by the party they once called home. ÷AS

IF we hadn’t had enough mad scaremonge­ring from Project Fear already, the UK manager of Amazon – one Doug Gurr – has now weighed in with a truly risible prediction that Britain could be wracked by ‘civil unrest’ within two weeks if we leave the EU with no deal. But then again, Mr Gurr is used to working for an opaque, unaccounta­ble behemoth. No wonder he seems to like the EU so much.

LAbOur was last night accused of trying to silence an MP who stood up to Jeremy Corbyn over his failure to tackle anti-Semitism in the party.

Dame Margaret Hodge was threatened with disciplina­ry action last week for calling the Labour leader an anti-Semite and a racist.

Now her lawyers have written to the party to describe the disciplina­ry threat as a ‘veiled attempt to silence’ a dissenting voice.

And the MP stood by her criticism of her leader, saying she had always disagreed with those who called him an anti-Semite but ‘people have to be judged on what they do and not what they say’.

Last night Mr Corbyn sparked further anger after he failed to turn up to a crunch meeting of the Parliament­ary Labour Party to discuss the party’s anti-Semitism problem.

The row erupted last week when Labour’s ruling body, the National Executive Committee, decided against adopting the internatio­nallyaccep­ted definition of anti-Semitism in its code of conduct. Dame Margafor

‘A bridge too far’

ret said after last night’s meeting that it ‘would have been much better’ had the Labour leader attended so he could have understood the depth of anger in the party.

‘I am deeply depressed,’ she said. ‘This is the party I joined more than 50 years ago as a natural home for Jews.

‘We can’t even start on the long journey of regaining the trust of the Jewish community without accepting the internatio­nal definition.’

Labour launched an investigat­ion into Dame Margaret after she confronted Mr Corbyn in the Commons. The MP was reported to have called him a ‘f****** anti-Semite and a racist’, but in the legal letter she denied having sworn.

‘This is vehemently denied, and our client is aware of multiple witnesses who can testify that she did not swear,’ the letter from her law firm, Mishcon de reya, said. ‘Any allegation our client was abusive is false.’ Dame Margaret, who lost family members in the Holocaust, stood by her actions in confrontin­g Mr Corbyn.

She told the bbC’s Today programme: ‘I think what has happened over the last months... is just a bridge too far.’

She said she had received a wave of anti- Semitic abuse since the Commons clash, including being told she was ‘under the orders of my paymasters in Israel’.

She said she received a disciplina­ry letter within 12 hours of speaking to Mr Corbyn.

‘Think how long it has taken the Labour Party to respond at all to any of the allegation­s of anti-Semitism,’ she added.

In a letter to Labour’s general secretary, Mishcon de reya said the party had failed to explain the allegation against the MP or the rule that had been breached. It added: ‘Your threat to suspend our client if she repeats this non-particular­ised conduct appears to be a veiled attempt to silence her’.

The law firm accused Labour of ‘sloppiness’ in its handling of the case and said it could only assume that the rule Dame Margaret is being investigat­ed over is one that relates to actions deemed to be grossly detrimenta­l to the party. It said it was ‘perverse’ that the same rule used to deal with antiSemiti­sm in the party was now being invoked against Dame Margaret ‘for voicing her concern that anti-Semitism has not been properly dealt with’.

Dame Margaret told the bbC she ‘ blew her top’ when she found out Labour would not be adopting the internatio­nal guidelines on anti- Semitism. She added: ‘I thought, rather than do what politician­s usually do, and talk each other down behind our backs, I would go and confront him’. Asked why Mr Corbyn was not at the PLP meeting, a source said: ‘Jeremy was never scheduled to attend.’

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