Labour suspends second parliamentary candidate
over Israel comments
Withdrawal of backing for Graham Jones, candidate for
Hyndburn, follows Starmer’s action against Azhar Ali in Rochdale
Kiran
Stacey, Eleni Courea and Aletha Adu
Tue 13 Feb
2024 19.29 GMT
Labour has
suspended a second parliamentary candidate over their remarks about Israel, as
Keir Starmer struggles to contain the fallout from the leak of a private
meeting of party activists in Lancashire last year.
Party
sources said on Tuesday that Labour had suspended Graham Jones, the candidate
for Hyndburn, less than 24 hours after the party withdrew its support from
Azhar Ali, its candidate for the Rochdale byelection later this month.
With the
party now looking for two new candidates for the general election, senior
Labour figures were fighting among each other on Tuesday over who was to blame
for the escalating crisis.
One Labour
activist called the party’s handling of the controversy a “shitshow”. A senior
Labour peer called it a “car crash”, adding: “We should be more careful in who
we have as our candidates.”
Starmer
defended his decisions on Tuesday, after a damaging 48 hours in which he had
initially backed Ali before changing his mind when new recordings emerged from
the meeting.
“Certain
information came to light over the weekend in relation to the candidate [and]
there was a fulsome apology,” he said. “Further information came to light
yesterday calling for decisive action, so I took decisive action.”
The
recordings all come from a single meeting in October, which sources have told
the Guardian was held between Ali, Jones and a group of Labour councillors who
were threatening to quit the party over its stance on Gaza.
The Middle
East crisis has proved one of the most divisive issues for Labour in recent
years, with many MPs, councillors and activists accusing Starmer of not going
far enough in condemning Israel’s assault on Gaza.
In the
latest recording, which was first reported on Tuesday by the Guido Fawkes
website, Jones appeared to try to defend the Labour leader, but did so by
expressing views that were condemned by Jewish Labour supporters as
“appalling”.
Jones said
during the meeting: “I’m sure when [world leaders] go home, like me, pardon my
French [they say] ‘fucking Israel’ again.”
He went on
to criticise British people who choose to fight for the Israel Defense Forces,
saying wrongly that doing so was against the law.
“No British
person should be fighting for any other country at all, full stop,” he said.
“It is against the law and you should be locked up.”
The Jewish
Labour Movement issued a statement on Tuesday afternoon saying: “Graham Jones’s
comments about British-Israeli Jews are appalling and unacceptable within the
Labour party.”
Jones’s
suspension came a day after the party withdrew its support for Ali over
comments made at the same meeting, in which he said he believed Israel had
deliberately allowed the Hamas attack on 7 October to happen as a pretext for
its assault on the strip.
Starmer
initially backed Ali over his comments following a rapid apology from the
Rochdale candidate, with one shadow minister saying Ali had “fallen for an
online conspiracy theory which does not represent his view”.
But the
Labour leader reversed that decision on Monday night after further details
emerged from the meeting showing Ali had also blamed “people in the media from
certain Jewish quarters” for the suspension of the Labour MP Andy McDonald.
While
electoral rules mean Ali is technically still the Labour candidate for the
Rochdale byelection later this month, the party is no longer giving him its
support, meaning Labour officials and MPs will not travel to the constituency
to help him.
Starmer’s
supporters say there was no way the Labour leader could have known about
remarks made at a private meeting long before the Rochdale byelection was
called – though many are now concerned about the prospect that George Galloway,
the controversial former Labour MP, will win instead.
One Labour
activist said: “My guess is Galloway wins unless Labour wants to be really
brave and say vote for the Tory. It’s the worst outcome.” Bookmakers have now
made Galloway the favourite to take the seat.
Some have
accused Starmer of fuelling factionalism within the party by acting more slowly
against Ali than he has against party members on the left who have been
punished for less extreme breaches over Israel.
Jamie
Driscoll, the mayor of the North of Tyne, who was blocked from running again as
a Labour mayoral candidate after appearing onstage with the pro-Palestinian
film-maker Ken Loach – months before the Hamas attacks – said: “This all shows
if you are on Team Keir you can behave how you like.”
However,
others say Starmer’s actions have been fuelled not by factionalism but by his
slow decision-making process and a failure of political instinct.
One Jewish
Labour MP said: “In retrospect it would have been the right thing to take a
bold decision on Saturday.” A senior party adviser said: “I don’t know why we
ever thought we would be able to get away with claiming that one of our
candidates had ‘fallen for’ a conspiracy theory he didn’t believe in.”
Some in the
party are comparing the row of the last few days with the long-running saga
over Labour’s plans to spend £28bn on green investment, which Starmer publicly
dropped last week after weeks of reports saying he had already decided to do
so.
Sue Gray,
Starmer’s chief of staff, is conducting an inquiry into the source of those
reports. But the inquiry itself is threatening to further exacerbate tensions
within the party, with some staff members having filed a complaint about Gray’s
behaviour.
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