Chris Williamson describes
how the Labour Right, with the complicity of Momentum, allowed the fake ‘Anti-Semitism’ narrative to destroy
the Left
Ten Year’s Hard Labour – Chris Williamson,
Lola Books, 2022, pp. 394
There is a tendency
amongst many on the left to engage in an uncritical adulation of Jeremy Corbyn now
that we see how awful is his successor, the serial liar and empty suit, Sir Stürmer. That would be a mistake.
Stürmer did not emerge from nowhere. Despite being part of the Chicken
Coup, Corbyn embraced this latter day Brutus without once questioning his role
as Director of Public Prosecutions in the cases of Julian Assange, IanTomlinson and other similar cases.
Without an analysis and understanding of where Corbyn and his entourage
went wrong and why their policy of appeasement could only lead to disaster, the Left is destined to repeat the same errors.
Corbyn ended up throwing his friends to the Zionist wolves in a vain attempt to appease them
For those who wish to
understand how the Corbyn Project went from the dizzy heights of near election
victory in 2017 to catastrophic defeat two years later, Chris Williamson’s
account is compulsory reading. Unlike books such as those by Owen
Jones and Gabriel
Pogrund/Patrick Wintour, it isn’t concerned with the gossip and tittle
tattle of who did what in the Leader of the Opposition’s Office. [LOTO]
This is a book about
the sustained attack that was mounted by Britain’s political establishment, in
conjunction with the Zionist lobby and the secret state, on Corbyn and his allies.
All with the connivance of Labour’s senior staff and the Labour Right. An
attack which was fought in the name of ‘anti-Semitism’.
Today we can see where
this fight has ended up. Starmer became leader of the Labour Party pledging
to ‘root out anti-Semitism from the
Labour Party’. Yet today Jews are five
times more likely to be expelled for anti-Semitism than non-Jews. People
like Jewish Voices for Labour members like Mike Howard, 72, for 40-years a Labour member and former
Hastings councillor and Riva Joffe, a South African-born anti-apartheid activist in
her 80s. Both died with the slur of ‘anti-Semitism’ hanging over them.
Not surprisingly Williamson’s
book has been ignored by the mainstream press and those who were responsible
for the fake anti-Semitism attacks on socialists and anti-racists in the Labour
Party. Stürmer and General
Secretary David Evans have ridden roughshod over all notions of natural justice
and due process as they have launched a witchhunt, the likes of which has never
been seen before in the Labour Party.
Those in the media who
would have cried to the heavens if Corbyn had expelled Margaret Hodge or Ruth
Smeeth, keep silent as thousands have been excluded by Stürmer.
I was the first Jewish
person to be expelled in February 2018. When allegations of ‘anti-Semitism’
were first raised in the Labour Party we were told that we were paranoid to
suggest that it was all about Israel and Zionism. Yet today Stürmer, who defines
himself as a Zionist ‘without
qualification’ makes no pretence about the fact that he considers anti-Zionism
to be anti-Semitism.
What Williamson calls
the ‘optics left’, such as Novara Media, Richard
Seymour, Dave Renton and Owen Jones, played a major part in the defeat of the
Corbyn project. This book raises the question as to whether the Left can ever win
control of the Labour Party since the Right will stop at nothing, including
open collaboration with the Tories and the prostitute press, to destroy anyone
who isn’t committed to neo-liberalism and NATO.
This book isn’t an autobiography
and, as it name suggests, covers the years when Williamson was MP for Derby
North, from 2010-15 and 2017-19, ending in his defeat in 2019.
Bereft of ideas, Starmer's only concern is to turn Labour into a safe party of capitalism
Williamson ignores the
period in the early to mid-2000s when he was Labour’s pragmatic leader
of Derby Council making arrangements with the Tories in order that Labour could
retain control of the Council and even using the Private Finance Initiative in
order to buy up housing.
Chris Williamson
followed in the footsteps of his hero, Tony Benn, in moving from right to left.
Perhaps this was part of the reason why he was so hated by the right. Although
Williamson came from a working class background unlike the aristocratic Benn,
he defied the tradition in the Labour Party of Labour MPs moving in the
opposite direction.
Williamson held on to Derby
North, a red wall seat, in 2010 with a majority of just 613. In 2015 he lost
the seat by the smallest majority in England, 41. In 2017, the first
election under Corbyn, Williamson regained it with a majority of 2,015.
In 2015 right-wing Labour
MPs, believing their own rhetoric that Corbyn would lose disastrously, asked
voters to support them despite Corbyn’s
leadership. Their campaigns, as we now know, were covertly
funded by the rogue Ergon House operation run by Labour’s senior staff.
Nick Cohen summed
up their mentality just one month before Theresa May announced the 2017 election.
Cohen described the election disaster that was around the corner:
On current
polling, Labour will
get around a quarter of the vote... Will there be 150, 125, 100 Labour MPs by
the end of the flaying? My advice is to think of a number then halve it.’
When the results were
announced Labour had achieved a 40% share of the vote and an increase of 30 in
the number of seats. It was the largest swing since 1945 and 9.6% more than Ed
Miliband’s miserable
performance in 2015.
Williamson took a
principled stance and far from distancing himself from Corbyn issued a press
release announcing himself as ‘the most
Corbyn-friendly candidate standing anywhere in Britain.’ [93]
The Miliband Years
Williamson devotes
relatively little time to his period in parliament from 2010-2015 when he was a Shadow Fire Minister
under Ed Miliband before being sacked after standing on an FBU picket line. Williamson
was not a firebrand or anti-imperialist when he was first elected. In March
2011 he supported a resolution approving the imposition of a no-fly zone in
Libya, the precursor to NATO’s bombing of Libya. A decision he was to later regret.
Williamson describes
how Miliband, having been elected as the left-wing candidate, proved a bitter
disappointment. Williamson savages the decision to abstain as the Tories took
the axe to social security benefits. Under Miliband the approach to austerity was
that the Coalition, in the words of Shadow Chancellor Alan Johnson, was ‘cutting too far and too fast.’ [5]
Chuka Ummuna, who was
later to defect to the Lib Dems, was put in charge of opposing the
privatisation of the Post Office. When Williamson urged Ummuna to commit Labour
to renationalising the Post Office, the answer was revealing as to who really
wields power in Britain: ‘We can’t do
that. The City wouldn’t wear it.’[26]
Williamson recalls
Nicky Morgan, the Education Secretary, remarking that ‘One of the first acts of the Coalition government was to turbo-charge
Lord Adonis’s academy programme.’ [28] The privatisation of local authority
schools had been inherited from New Labour.
As Williamson observed
‘The Shadow of New Labourism continued to
linger on in the Miliband years.’ The book however is most revealing for
its description of the Corbyn years and how Corbyn and the Labour Left snatched
defeat from the jaws of victory in 2017.
The Corbyn Years
From the very
beginning of his leadership Corbyn faced the unremitting opposition of Labour’s
senior staff who, it was revealed in Labour’s
Leaked Report, had openly wanted a Tory victory. When the polls began to
turn in Corbyn’s favour they openly expressed their disappointment.
Corbyn’s election had been
a fluke. The Labour Right had convinced itself that one-person one-vote would
ensure that the Left would be forever marginalised. Right-wing MPs like Sadiq
Khan had persuaded themselves that Corbyn could never win and therefore nominated
him in order to make the process seem democratic. As Margaret Beckett ruefully remarked
later, she was a ‘moron’ for having done so.
After having attacked
Corbyn on a variety of grounds without success, the Right settled on
‘anti-Semitism’ as their chosen weapon. There were many reasons for this, not
least that it gave them the moral high ground to be seen to be attacking Corbyn
as a racist.
Lansman ended up working with arch-Zionist and witchhunter, Luke Akehurst
This should have been
called out for what it was from the beginning. This was the most catastrophic
mistake of Corbyn and the Labour Left, especially Momentum under Jon Lansman’s baleful
influence.
It wasn’t as if it was
difficult to point out the hypocrisy of the Labour Right adopting the mantle of
anti-racism. The British National Party even sent
Margaret Hodge a bunch of flowers in appreciation of her proposal for a Whites
only housing policy.
Tom Watson, who declared
that he wouldn’t rest easy until every last anti-Semite had been expelled from Labour,
had a long record of playing the race card stretching back to the Birmingham Hodshrove
by-election in 2004 when he told
the electorate that Labour was ‘on your
side’ unlike the Lib Dems who ‘were
on the side of asylum seekers’.
When Phil Woolas, who
had run
a racist campaign in 2010 designed to ‘make
the white folks angry’, was removed by an Election Court from Parliament
for lying about his Lib Dem opponent, Watson wrote
about how he had lost sleep thinking about ‘poor
Phil’
Others who led the
‘anti-Semitism’ campaign included John Mann, who had previously issued
the Bassetlaw Anti-Social Behaviour Handbook which labelled a whole ethnic
group, Gypsies, as anti-social. Mann ended up being interviewed
by the Police under caution.
The worst New Labour
racists had suddenly become concerned about anti-Semitism. Of course the Labour
Party, with nearly 600,000 members harboured a handful of anti-Semites. It
would be surprising if they didn’t. Statistically the Labour Party no doubt harboured
a few paedophiles but no one suggested that Labour was overrun by them.
The Labour Right was
full to the brim with Islamaphobes but nobody mentioned that. Yet Corbyn,
McDonnell and Lansman, alongside the openly Zionist AWL adopted the anti-Semitism
narrative wholesale.
The
‘anti-Semitism’ allegations were clearly about Israel. Today every human rights
organisation accepts that Israel is an apartheid
state. The only defence Zionist supporters have is to cry ‘anti-Semitism’.
Unfortunately Williamson was the only Labour MP to get it.
When Black anti-racist
activist Marc Wadsworth was suspended and then expelled
for having criticised Ruth Smeeth MP at the Chakrabarti Inquiry press
conference, only Williamson stood
up for him. When Jackie Walker, a Black-Jewish member was suspended it was
Williamson who stood
by her. Williamson supported
Labour Against the Witchhunt and
spoke on its platforms alongside expelled and suspended members.
At Wadsworth’s hearing
a ‘lynch
mob’ of all-White MPs accompanied Smeeth to the hearing. Yet instead of
Corbyn coming out in support of his old friend, Marc was told by LOTO that ‘it won’t help Jeremy if there is a
demonstration.’[86] When Marc told the press that Corbyn had phoned him
personally to give support LOTO went out of their way to deny
it.
When Williamson
appeared on a platform with Jackie Walker, Ben Folley of LOTO told Williamson to
heed the Zionists’ ‘advice’ not to do so. [111] As Williamson recounted:
The febrile
atmosphere bludgeoned every MP but me into accepting the false narrative. I
was, literally, the only MP prepared to challenge it publicly.
To this day I wonder
why it never occurred to Corbyn’s advisors such as Seamus Milne that retreating
only encourages your enemies. In Milne’s case he knew from personal experience
how Israel’s supporters deploy accusations of ‘anti-Semitism’. The question must arise as to who Milne was working for.
If Jeremy had stood up
to the weaponisation of anti-Semitism he could have turned the tables on his
detractors. He could have pointed to New Labour’s racist record and mobilised
the 70% of Labour Party members who consistently
refused to accept that Labour was an anti-Semitic party.
The Zionist lobby in
the Labour Party led by the Jewish Labour Movement [JLM] had its knives out for
Williamson who they outrageously called a ‘Jew-baiter’.
Williamson who had fought National Front influence on building sites, often
with his fists, was now called a racist by those who had never fought either
racism or anti-Semitism.
In March 2018 the
Board of Deputies called a demonstration to protest at
Labour ‘anti-Semitism’. Among the ‘anti-racists’ who attended were Norman
Tebbit MP of the ‘cricket
test’ and Ian Paisley Jnr, of the anti-Catholic DUP. Tebbit had previously said
that those who supported the Indian or Pakistani cricket teams were not really British
was now an anti-racist!
This was the first
‘anti-racist’ demonstration that the Board had ever called. When Oswald
Moseley’s British Union of Fascists tried to march through the East End in
October 1936 they were repulsed at the Battle
of Cable Street despite the Board advising
Jews to stay indoors and keep their heads down. The Jewish Chronicle wrote:
Jews are
urgently warned to keep away from the route of the Blackshirt march and from
their meetings. Jews who, however innocently, become involved in any possible
disorders will be actively helping antisemitism and Jew-baiting. Unless you
want to help the Jew-baiters, keep away.”
When
the National Front was mobilising on the streets in the 1970s the Board repeated
the same message.
The Zionist movement
has never fought anti-Semitism. The
Zionist movement, when it first arose at
the end of the 19th century, was greeted by most Jews as a form of
Jewish anti-Semitism. Zionism believed that anti-Semitism was a virus that all
non-Jews carried around with them and therefore it was futile to fight against
it.
Williamson is suspended by Jennie Formby
Corbyn and his
advisors, rather than standing up to their detractors, appeased and apologised,
throwing first Ken Livingstone and then Williamson to the wolves.
Williamson was
suspended in 2019. It was a classic example of what George Orwell called Doublethink. In the eyes of Jennie
Formby and the witchhunters Black was
White. At a meeting of Sheffield Momentum in February 2019 Williamson gave a
speech in which he stated ‘We’ve been too
apologetic. What have we to apologise for? For being an anti-racist party?’
[150]
This was twisted
by the Yorkshire Post into ‘Chris
Williamson tells a Sheffield Momentum meeting that Labour has been “too
apologetic” about anti-Semitism”
A good example of how
the McCarthyist ‘guilt-by-association’ technique had been adopted and accepted
by Corbyn and Formby was the comment in the right-wing Labour magazine Prospect
on hearing of Williamson’s suspension.
This week
matters came to a head. In the space of 48 hours we have seen Williamson
attempt to host an event in Parliament with a woman who has been
suspended from the Labour Party under investigation for antisemitism before
telling an event in Sheffield that the Party has been “too apologetic”
about the same topic.
These two
things in one week alone should have been enough to warrant disciplinary action
even if they had come from nowhere. But Williamson has a well-established
history of upsetting the Jewish community
Jonathan Freedland of The Guardian was prominent amongst who prostituted themselves for the Israeli state
The weasel words of these press whores, because journalists they are not, are a wonder to behold. They build their case resting one lie on
top of another. Who in the ‘Jewish Community’ (is there one?) was upset? We are not told. Apparently it is
unacceptable to host an ‘event’ (a film called, appropriately enough The Witchhunt)
because it is with a woman accused of, anti-Semitism. In other words you are guilty until proven innocent (although Jackie Walker was at no time accused of antisemitism).
Yet what was the
response of LOTO? To defend Williamson?
To call out the harlots of the press and the Labour Right? No their advice was to
apologise. Not only did the Socialist Campaign Group not defend Williamson but
Laura Pidcock told him not to attend any more meetings! [159]
Solidarity was never
the SCG’s strong point. McDonnell’s advice was to ‘apologise again and again’. [198] The only members to offer any
support were Richard Burgon and the MP for Crewe, Laura Smith.
Like Dave Renton, another SWP exile, Richard Seymour ended up justifying the witchhunt
All the
soft-Corbynites from Guardian journalist Owen Jones to Jon Lansman and Novara Media joined the calls for
Williamson’s expulsion. Even Richard Seymour, the ex-SWP writer repeated the lie that Williamson had said Labour was too apologetic about anti-Semitism.
[173] Yet what Williamson said was easily
available.
In June 2019 a
National Executive panel voted 2-1 to reinstate Williamson. Almost immediately
a hue and cry was raised and Tom Watson launched a petition amongst right-wing peers
and MPs. What Corbyn should have done was to issue a statement welcoming the
decision and reaffirming his earlier statement of 31 January 2019 to the Derby Telegraph that ‘He is not an anti-Semitic in anyway.’ [192]
Yet Corbyn not only
didn’t defend Williamson he issued a statement implying that he was
anti-Semitic. Once again Corbyn had done the work of the Right. Williamson was
duly resuspended 48 hours later.
Williamson went to
court and applied for a Declaration that the suspension was unlawful. In
September 2019 Justice Popperwell ruled that it was indeed unlawful. In
anticipation Labour General Secretary Jennie Formby had issued a third
suspension on a flimsy pretext but this was enough to carry the day and
Williamson remained suspended.
Formby was appointed
General Secretary in the wake of Iain McNicoll’s resignation. She was a
supporter of Corbyn yet she had engineered a situation where the demands of the
Right for Williamson’s head were met. Not for nothing does Williamson label her
‘Judas Jennie’ though perhaps this is unfair. Judas was paid
30 pieces of silver whereas Jennie betrayed Williamson for nothing!
After the high hopes
of September 2015 and his success in defeating the challenge of Owen Smith MP
in 2016 Corbyn, instead of fighting Labour’s pro-capitalist MPs had succumbed
to them. As Williamson said of LOTO ‘they
were one-trick ponies, whose only strategy was to appease and capitulate to
hostile forces.’
Did this appeasement
of the JLM achieve anything? Did Formby not understand that when she boasted of
the expulsion of hundreds of Labour Party members for ‘anti-Semitism’ that all
she was doing was confirming the Right’s false anti-Semitism narrative?
Labour’s Leaked Report
(p.306) sums up the policy that Corbyn and his advisors had adopted of
appeasing the Zionist lobby:
Jeremy Corbyn
himself and members of his staff team requested to GLU that particular
antisemitism cases be dealt with. In 2017 LOTO staff chased for action on
high-profile antisemitism cases Ken Livingstone, Tony Greenstein, Jackie Walker
and Marc Wadsworth, stressing that these cases were of great concern to Jewish
stakeholders and that resolving them was essential to “rebuilding trust between
the Labour Party and the Jewish community”.
Well we were all
expelled or forced out of the party. Was trust rebuilt? Of course not. It
simply whetted the appetite of Corbyn’s accusers who went on to demand more and
more heads until there was no one left to expel but Corbyn himself.
Not content with
preventing Williamson stand at the 2019 election, Corbyn and Formby introduced
‘fast track’ expulsions for the most ‘egregious’ of cases, which were
subsequently used against hundreds of people including Corbyn himself.
Corbyn, who in a different era had been Secretary of Labour Against the Witchhunt, opposed the
very things he had always fought for such as Open Selection of MPs at the 2018
conference. In doing so he sealed his own fate.
Possibly the main
fault of Williamson’s book is his tendency to seek revenge against detractors
like Edward Isaacs of Bristol University when they are simply unimportant.
Williamson also does not really deal with whether what happened is inevitable
in a reformist social democratic party which seeks to manage capitalism rather
than change it.
However this book will
be ignored by the Left at its peril. It
is not about personalities or the weakness of Corbyn and Formby but about
socialist strategy and whether Labour is doomed to remain a
pro-capitalist party.
Tony Greenstein
Having been a small, local player in this period of LP history, and inevitably, a victim of the contrived “antisemitism” witch-hunt and protesting anti-democratic proscriptions, I sense this book will be an interesting read: as ever, I enjoy Tony’s critical analysis.
ReplyDeleteThere was a staggering niavete among those surrounding Corbyn and even with Corbyn himself.
ReplyDeleteA couple of us were in conversation with John McDonnell when he visited our CLP just after Jeremy had been elected. We both warned him and questioned him over what plans he/they had to counter the onslaught of contrived anti-Semitism accusations which would be thrown at Corbyn by the Zionists? He attempted to assure us not to worry because "there was only a handful" of them. We knew then he hadn't a clue about who he was dealing with and how ruthless they are. Chris Williamson got it from a very early stage, which was why he was targeted.
Zionists are members of the Labour Party, and any other Party in fact, for only one reason, which is to protect the racist, apartheid State of Israel. Anyone who loses sight of that will make the same mistakes Corbyn did. Under Starmer, the LP is no longer a Socialist Party, if it ever was, it is now the UK Zionist Party. Zionism and Socialism CANNOT live under the same roof, they are mutually exclusive.
An excellent analysis of this period in Labour history. My own instinctive conclusion was, from the first shouts of AS agst Corbyn et al, was that it was all about Israel, not Jews. Every person, and certainly every jew, who screamed AS to Corbyn was a zionist. There was even a meeting shown on utube, where Norman Finklestein was accused of AS because of his support for Palestinians. And Hodge herself is on record for saying that support for Palestine was AS. Of course the Right wingers feared Corbynism but they were delighted to use the AS smear, knowing a frontal assault on socialism would not hv much success.
ReplyDeleteI wrote this letter to Jeremy Corbyn in April, 2018, I didn't get a reply:
ReplyDeleteDear Jeremy,
Of course, I agree with you that anti-Semitism and any other
racism must be stamped out in the Labour Party whatever the extent.
We must adhere to the very highest standards in this respect.
However, I reread the Chakrabarti report over the weekend and I note
that she stated:
‘The Labour Party is not overrun by antisemitism, Islamophobia or
other forms of racism. Further, it is the party that initiated every
single United Kingdom race equality law. However, as with wider
society, there is too much clear evidence (going back some years) of
minority hateful or ignorant attitudes and behaviours festering within
a sometimes-bitter incivility of discourse.'
Nevertheless, the demonstration on Monday organised by the Board
of Deputies and the Jewish Leadership Council and attended by labour
Party MP’s gave the impression that the Labour Party has a major
problem with anti-Semitism. I find this difficult to believe and my
Jewish friends assure me that this is not the case. So where lies the
truth of the matter? I note that British Jewry is very diverse and
although the Jewish Labour Movement (JLM) and the Board of Deputies
(BOD) complain about anti-Semitism within the Labour Party, other
groups such as Jewish Voice for Labour, Jewdas, Jews for Justice for
Palestine, Free Speech on Israel and the Jewish Socialist Group, do
not. These other groups claim that they are not represented by the BOD
or the JLM and organised a counter demonstration to support yourself
and the Labour Party against accusations of anti-Semitism.
Has there been a further investigation that demonstrates that
anti-Semitism has increased since the Chakrabarti report? If this is
not the case, where is the evidence that the Labour Party has a
special problem with anti-Semitism? Statements by the Campaign
against Anti-Semitism such as “The Labour Party under Jeremy Corbyn is
now a racist party and to be silent now is to condone’, cannot be
true. I am somewhat disappointed that you gave credence this lie by
your apology to a one group of the Jewish community who do not
represent the other Jews who are horrified by their accusations. I am
also appalled that our own MP’s with others joined a demonstration
that was specifically against their own party and although I will
never indulge in personal abuse of them, I have been openly critical
of their behaviour which I believe is disloyal to both you and the
Labour Party. I now fear that I will be labelled as an anti-Semite
because I criticised my MP and others for attending this
demonstration.
Can you please provide me with facts and figures that can help me
to understand the extent of anti-Semitism within the Labour Party?
Until I know this, I will continue to believe what Shami Chakrabarti
reported, which is that there is a minority problem with anti-Semitism
and other racisms within the party, which can be dealt with by the
implementation of her recommendations.
Although it is to be regretted that there is any anti-Semitism at
all in the party, public exaggeration of the problem is damaging and
unhelpful and Labour MP’s who support any false narrative should be
ashamed of themselves.
Yours sincerely,
Mary Sullivan
When Jeremy was first elected, a couple of us set at a table with John McDonnell when he visited our CLP and asked him if he/they had a plan to combat the onslaught of antisemitic accusations which were now going to be flung at Jeremy by the Zionists. His response was not to worry, “there is only a handful”. We knew there and then that he hadn’t a clue how bad it was going to get and how ruthless these people are.
ReplyDeleteThere is only one reason for Zionists to be members of the Labour Party, or indeed any Party, it is to protect the brutal, racist, apartheid State of Israel and ensure that it’s crimes against the Palestinians, as far as possible, do not get discussed nor see the light of day. Chris Williamson was the only person within the PLP to recognise this and warn against it.
As a result of the ineptitude of McDonnell, Jennie Formby and others, including Corbyn, we now have a Labour Party which is no longer Socialist, if it ever was, and in its place under Starmer, has emerged the Zionist Party of the UK. Zionism and Socialism are mutually exclusive and cannot live under the same roof.
I'm really enjoying CW's book which is interesting & insightful.
ReplyDeleteglad to hear it. It is a good documentary record of what happened
DeleteWhen I re-joined the Labour Party to support Jeremy Corbyn I saw the Witch Hunt gathering pace and felt I had to join forces with those who were challenging it. As someone with Jewish heritage I was angry about the Holocaust being used for the purposes of smearing socialists. Chris Williamson was made an example to deter left MPs from protesting and so it continued. The Labour Party is now being rebuilt on the lie that Jeremy Corbyn and his supporters were all anti-Semitic and this has led to the expulsion of people of the calibre of socialist film maker Ken Loach. It will never thrive on this basis. My expulsion came as a release from a toxic situation which caused untold stress and division in the party. I am grateful to Chris Williamson for writing this book and telling the other story which was not narrated by mainstream media and other social commentators who colluded. Thanks too to Tony Greenstein for relating the true facts and providing an interesting and perceptive analysis.
ReplyDelete