George Galloway stands accused of profiting from
the pain of Gaza – and rightly so. But he is not the only one
Jonathan
Freedland
The new Rochdale MP is hardly unique. He is just
highly adept at swimming in the toxic swamp that is so much of our politics
Fri 1 Mar 2024 18.23 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2024/mar/01/george-galloway-profiting-pain-gaza-rochdale
You’re
going to hear a lot of talk about George Galloway in the coming days, much of
it negative and almost all of it true. But there will be one charge thrown at
the new member for Rochdale – winner of a byelection victory yesterday as
sweeping as the triumph he recorded in Bradford West more than a decade ago –
that will be false and unfair.
Start with
the accusations that stand up. Galloway poses as a man of the left – his latest
vehicle is called the Workers party of Britain. But he backed Nigel Farage’s
Brexit party (now Reform) in 2019 – the pair had appeared together, during the
2016 referendum campaign, laughing and smiling – and the Conservatives in
Scotland in 2021. You did not misread that sentence: George Galloway voted Tory
only three years ago.
The right
are more comfortable with Galloway than you might expect. In Rochdale, he won
the warm endorsement of Nick Griffin, the former leader of the British National
party. “George Galloway isn’t just right on keeping us out of Zionist wars,”
wrote Griffin. “He also understands the position of working class white Brits
on immigration.” Offered the chance to reject that support on Radio 4’s Today
programme yesterday, Galloway’s deputy – the former MP Chris Williamson, who
was suspended from Jeremy Corbyn’s Labour party over comments he made about
antisemitism – pointedly refused. You may also have seen the photographs of
Galloway apparently bonding with Steve Bannon, a one-time Trump lieutenant and
current peddler of online conspiracy theories.
Others will
remind you of Galloway’s employment history, and those facts will also be true.
He did serve as a well-remunerated presenter for Press TV and Russia Today
(RT), mouthpieces of Tehran and Vladimir Putin respectively – hardly a surprise
given his admiration for a string of tyrannical regimes. In 1994, he stood
before Saddam Hussein of Iraq, the man who had jailed, tortured and killed so
many of his own people, and declared: “Sir, I salute your courage, your
strength, your indefatigability.” In 2002, he told this newspaper that “the
disappearance of the Soviet Union is the biggest catastrophe of my life.” When
an estimated 1,300 Syrians were killed by chemical weapons in the Damascus
suburb of Ghouta, Galloway did not, as most did, blame Bashar al-Assad – who he
had long praised for his “dignity” – but rather pointed the finger at an
imagined, if improbable, alliance of al-Qaida and … Israel. He offered no
evidence, but that was his “theory”.
Indeed,
given his determination to cast himself as a defender of Muslims – a pitch that
paid great dividends in Rochdale – it’s striking how often he lines up behind
those who kill, maim or oppress Muslims, even in their hundreds of thousands.
In 2020, Galloway used his platform on RT to dismiss the copious evidence of
China’s persecution of an estimated one million Uyghur Muslims: “There are no
concentration camps in China,” he said, merely “re-education centres” for
terrorists that humanely seek to draw them away from the path of extremism.
So he
should not be confused for any kind of progressive. Doubt over that question
was surely set aside in 2012 when he defended Julian Assange, then facing
allegations of rape, by announcing that any accusation would be rendered absurd
if there had first been an act of consensual sex. As he memorably put it, “I
mean, not everybody needs to be asked prior to each insertion.” If campaigners
against sexual violence disliked that, LGBTQ+ advocates might similarly recoil
from some intriguing lines that appeared in Galloway’s election literature in
Rochdale. “I believe in family … I believe in men and women. God created
everything in pairs.”
He likes to
boast that he is an implacable foe of racism. Yet he was fired by Talk Radio in
2019 over a tweet the station deemed antisemitic. After Tottenham, a north
London club with a strong Jewish following, lost in the Champions League final,
Galloway posted: “No #Israël flags on the Cup!” (Note the umlaut with its
whispered hint of Germany, scarcely a shock from a man who’s long been fond of
comparing Israel to the Nazis – a comparison that is specifically cited in the
International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance’s definition of antisemitism.)
In short,
much of what you hear about Galloway from his detractors will be true. Where,
then, is the falsehood? What is the unmerited charge laid against him?
It is the
claim that he is somehow uniquely guilty of exploiting the pain of Gaza for
political gain. Don’t get me wrong, he is certainly using that agony for his
own advantage. He targeted the Muslim voters of Rochdale, sending them a flyer
that did not mention re-opening the local maternity hospital, securing the
future of the local football club or luring Primark to the town – all of which
featured on the leaflet aimed at everyone else – but instead focused solely on
Gaza. No, the flaw in the claim is the notion that Galloway is unique in what
he’s doing.
He’s louder
than others and his rhetoric is more florid – but the grim truth is that, when
it comes to using the horror of the Israel-Hamas war, and all the fear and
loathing that has stirred up in this country, Galloway is far from alone.
The former
Conservative party deputy chair Lee Anderson was playing the same game when he
baselessly accused Sadiq Khan of being so in thrall to his Islamist “mates”
that he was failing to police pro-Palestinian demonstrations in London
sufficiently harshly. Anderson was trying to whip up anti-Muslim sentiment,
following a lead set by Suella Braverman when she spoke of “hate marches” and
“mobs” – and followed again, if codedly, by Rishi Sunak in his address outside
Downing Street late on Friday. He, too, attacked the marchers, warning against
the threat extremism and bigotry pose to democracy – a bit rich given his
indulgence of extremism and bigotry within his own party and his inability to
call Anderson’s anti-Muslim prejudice by its name. Still, the prime minister
can glimpse some favourable battlelines for the coming general election
campaign and didn’t want to let the opportunity slip. Sunak, Braverman and
Anderson all affect to have the purest motives – offering themselves as
protectors of British Jews in particular, as that community faces a record
surge of antisemitism – but, like Galloway, they’re in the exploitation
business. Others’ pain is their gain.
They are
the crudest practitioners, but they are not the only ones. The MPs of the
Scottish National party are, of course, sincere in their outrage at the plight
of Gaza. But few would argue that the ceasefire motion they tabled last week –
which triggered such ructions in the Commons – was aimed solely at helping
Palestinians in need. It was also designed to expose and widen the rift within
the ranks of their electoral rivals, Labour. Meanwhile, Labour and the
Conservatives plotted their own procedural moves thinking less of the Middle
East than of the great Westminster game.
As it
happens, this week a few members of the Commons foreign affairs committee sat
in a modest room and took evidence from Israelis and Palestinians about how
Britain might actually do something useful to end the bloodshed. The discussion
was serious and practical – and delivered precisely zero attention or political
benefit to those involved. If you want to profit from all this death and
destruction, it seems the trick is not to try to solve the problem – it’s to
capitalise on it, to take all that grief and heartache and trade on it.
So, yes,
Galloway has a record that brims with poison. But he is not quite the outlier
we might wish him to be. He was always a demagogue and a populist, and now our
politics is crammed with such people: “Make Rochdale Great Again” was his
slogan, a knowing, admiring nod to Donald Trump. As for what looks like a habit
of swooping down to prey on those in pain, pitting community against community
– well, maybe that once set him apart. But vultures are
all around us now.
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