UK’s Tories tear themselves apart over
Islamophobia
A row over a suspended MP has triggered a days-long
debate in the governing party about anti-Muslim hatred.
FEBRUARY
28, 2024 7:01 PM CET
BY ANDREW
MCDONALD
https://www.politico.eu/article/uk-tories-tear-themselves-apart-over-islamophobia-lee-anderson/
LONDON —
Britain’s Conservatives have yet another civil war on their hands.
The
governing party has spent much of the past week publicly agonizing about
anti-Muslim prejudice — and the bitter row shows no signs of subsiding.
Lee
Anderson, the party’s former deputy chairman — and once Prime Minister Rishi
Sunak’s favorite media Rottweiler — sparked a furious internal debate by
claiming “Islamists” have “got control” of London Mayor Sadiq Khan.
The
comments about the Labour mayor — who is the highest-profile Muslim politician
in the U.K. and routinely receives death threats — drew a fierce backlash, and
have dominated the week in Westminster.
The
Conservatives suspended Anderson after he refused to apologize, while Khan
called the comments “Islamophobic, anti-Muslim and racist.”
But some
prominent Tories have rallied around the MP regardless — while government
ministers have not been vehement in their condemnation.
Several
Conservative backbenchers told the right-leaning Daily Express newspaper — on
the record — that Anderson should get the Tory whip back. Others have privately
voiced concerns about his treatment, including in WhatsApp messages leaked to
the press.
In a series
of defiant interviews Tuesday, Anderson doubled down. He said he had received
“lots of support privately in WhatsApp groups and messages” from Conservative
MPs since his suspension.
“I’ve got
an email pinging in every 10 seconds in support, from not just my constituents,
from all around the country. I think I’m on the right side of the argument on
this — and history will judge me,” Anderson told ITV News.
Indeed,
Anderson — elected in 2019 after defecting from Labour — may be tapping into
wider Tory sentiment.
An Opinium
poll of Conservative Party members released Wednesday by the advocacy group
Hope not Hate found that more than half (58 percent) believe Islam is a “threat
to the British way of life.” A further 40 percent of members said they have a
“negative” view of Muslims.
When it
comes to the wider public, however, Conservative members — overwhelmingly older
and whiter than Brits in general — are not representative. A snap YouGov poll
after Anderson’s suspension found that many more Brits think the Conservatives
were right to suspend him than wrong.
“It will
hurt the Conservative Party more than it helps, especially in London. And it
will broadly hurt them in blue wall places,” said Sunder Katwala, director of
the British Future think tank that examines heritage and diversity. (The term
“blue wall” is shorthand for southern England seats that tend to vote
Conservative but now look winnable by the Liberal Democrats.)
Katwala
added, however, that the issue could be a boon for Reform U.K., the challenger
populist party set up by Brexiteer Nigel Farage aiming to peel away voters from
the Conservatives’ right flank. Anderson has publicly flirted with joining
Reform, but says he has no intention of doing so.
A party gripped
The row has
resurrected a long-dormant Tory debate about the term “Islamophobia,” which is
not officially defined in the U.K. Labour leader Keir Starmer has accused the
Conservatives of failing to tackle the issue and of harboring “extremists” in
the party.
Business
Secretary Kemi Badenoch, a Conservative rising star, has argued the government
instead prefers the term “anti-Muslim hatred” — and argued that those pushing
for an official definition of Islamophobia risked creating “a blasphemy law via
the back door.”
She added
on social network X: “In this country, we have a proud tradition of religious
freedom AND the freedom to criticize religion.”
Some
Conservatives were swift to condemn Anderson. Business Minister Nus Ghani
called his comments “foolish and dangerous” — while Home Office Minister Tom
Tugendhat surpassed most at the top of his party in describing the comments as
“anti-Muslim.”
Anderson is
far from the first senior Conservative to stoke controversy with comments on
Islam — and the war in Gaza appears to be charging the current debate.
Former Home
Secretary Suella Braverman, seen as a key challenger to Sunak on the right, was
criticized last week for writing that the “Islamists, the extremists and the
anti-Semites are in charge now.” She was referring to the impact of
pro-Palestinian protests which have taken place most weeks in the U.K. since
the Israel-Hamas war first flared last October.
During a
panel event in Washington last week, short-lived former PM Liz Truss did not
challenge U.S. firebrand Steve Bannon during a panel discussion in which he
described Tommy Robinson — a British nationalist activist with a history of
anti-Muslim comments — as a “hero.”
In a heated
exchange during prime minister’s questions Wednesday, Starmer pressed Sunak on
Truss’ stateside appearance. Sunak demurred, instead attacking Starmer for
having “sat there as anti-semitism ran rife through his party” under its former
leader, Jeremy Corbyn.
“The
parties are obsessed with going to the other parties and telling them about
their problems — but the only useful thing you can do is sort out your party’s
problem,” Katwala said.
“Of course,
you shouldn’t be accusing a Muslim mayor of something that’s not true and is a
smear about him … But actually, we’ve all got work to do because this boundary
of what is anti-Muslim prejudice or what is Islamophobia is a much less clear
thing,” he added.
“What we
really could do with is a bit of leadership, instead of a party battle — having
the public conversation about how to draw that line.”
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