update deskWorld News

UK politician criticized for using anti-Nazi poem to oppose smoking ban

The Board of Deputies of British Jews called a parliament member’s social-media posting “ill-considered and repugnant.”

Minister without Portfolio Esther McVey arrives for the weekly Cabinet meeting on May 14, 2024 in London Photo by Dan Kitwood/Getty Images.
Minister without Portfolio Esther McVey arrives for the weekly Cabinet meeting on May 14, 2024 in London Photo by Dan Kitwood/Getty Images.

British parliament member Esther McVey met with immediate pushback late last week after sharing lines on social media from a poem by Martin Niemöller titled “First They Came,” including the line “then they came for the Jews,” in reaction to proposed legislation against public smoking.

She wrote that they were “pertinent words re Starmer’s smoking ban.”

The Board of Deputies responded that the use of a poem about Nazi horrors to describe a potential smoking ban is “an ill-considered and repugnant action.”

The group said that it strongly encouraged “the MP for Tatton to delete her tweet and apologize for this breathtakingly thoughtless comparison.”

Following up a little more than 90 minutes after the board’s statement, McVey posted on X seven paragraphs of reply.

“Nobody is suggesting that banning smoking outside pubs can be equated with what happened to the Jews at the hands of the Nazis,” McVey wrote. “It is called an analogy—those who restrict freedoms start with easy targets then expand their reach.

She continued, saying she was “pretty sure everyone understands the point I was making and knows that no offense was ever intended and that no equivalence was being suggested.”

You have read 3 articles this month.
Register to receive full access to JNS.

Just before you scroll on...

Israel is at war. JNS is combating the stream of misinformation on Israel with real, honest and factual reporting. In order to deliver this in-depth, unbiased coverage of Israel and the Jewish world, we rely on readers like you. The support you provide allows our journalists to deliver the truth, free from bias and hidden agendas. Can we count on your support? Every contribution, big or small, helps JNS.org remain a trusted source of news you can rely on.

Become a part of our mission by donating today
Topics
Comments
Thank you. You are a loyal JNS Reader.
You have read more than 10 articles this month.
Please register for full access to continue reading and post comments.