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Regional secretary with the National Education Union
Labour’s anti-semitism crisis – what caused it and how well was it handled?
With anti-semitism cited by many as a factor in Labour’s defeat in the general election and left figures such as Michael Rosen and Ken Loach still being attacked over it, Ian Sinclair talks to academic and author JAMIE STERN-WEINER about the controversy

IN November 2019 Verso Books published the free e-book Antisemitism and the Labour Party, edited by Jamie Stern-Weiner, an Israeli-born, London-raised DPhil candidate in area studies at the University of Oxford.

Ian Sinclair (IS): What is your assessment of the anti-semitism controversy that has engulfed Jeremy Corbyn’s Labour Party since 2015?

Jamie Stern-Weiner (JSW): Over the past two decades, whenever Israel’s grotesque human rights violations aroused popular indignation in the UK, Israel’s supporters depicted this reaction as a “new anti-semitism.” 

The propaganda offensive against Labour that began in 2016 formed a novel variant of this strategy — a new “new anti-semitism.” 

IS: What has been the media’s role in all of this? 

IS: There seems to be a broad consensus that the Labour leadership and the Labour Party handled the anti-semitism controversy badly. Do you think they should have responded differently?

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