Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Jeremy Corbyn

“I loathe bullying, but I am not taking any lessons from a party that has presided over systematic bullying and discrimination against those who stick up for the Jewish community and for Israel in this country,” said British Prime Minister Boris Johnson.
“Britain would not be Britain without its Jewish community. And we will stand with you and celebrate with you,” British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said in his address.
“The only way we change is with a massive surge of *new* voters at the polls. UK, Vote!” tweeted Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.).
The list is normally published in late December or early January, but was released early this year, perhaps due to the elections on Dec. 12.
“Racists are racists are racists, and Jeremy Corbyn is a racist,” says Blue and White Party No. 2 Yair Lapid at the Israel Allies Foundation’s annual Chairman’s Conference.
Witness statements reveal that Jewish party members often do not feel comfortable attending Labour meetings “due to the intensity of animosity towards them.”
“Other parties are also affected by anti-Semitism—candidates have been withdrawn by the Liberal Democrats and the Conservatives, and by us because of it,” says British Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn.
“[It] really shows the blind spot that the Labour Party has. You cannot think anything other than that is chilling,” said Jonathan Goldstein, chairman of the Jewish Leadership Council.
Such a move would add to the leader and his party’s clear animosity towards and bias against the Jewish state.
There is “no room for anti-Semitism in the halls of power,” Israeli President Reuven Rivlin tells Chief Rabbi of the United Kingdom Ephraim Mirvis during a meeting in London.
After being asked four times if he wanted to address anti-Semitism within the Labour Party, Jeremy Corbyn hedged, instead expressing his determination “that our society will be safe for people of all faiths.”
“Raising concerns about anti-Jewish racism in the context of a general election ranks among the most painful moments I have experienced since taking office,” says British Chief Rabbi Ephraim Mirvis.