We are a group of Liberal Democrats proud of the recent growth in support for our party, but seriously concerned that our leaders’ repeated utterances about alleged antisemitism have not been based on sound evidence. We have tried to raise this issue with them and get it discussed within the party, but much to our disappointment, have encountered a total refusal, as if the topic were taboo. The experience has led us to publish this article.

There exists prejudice against Jews and other minorities in all corners of British society, but we have found no hard evidence behind repeated assertions (echoed by the Lib Dem leadership) that it is exceptional or rampant on the Labour left. Since 2017, some of us have been trying to get the leadership to discuss the issue properly, but without success. The experience motivated us to form this group, and write them an open letter in May, asking them to “tell the truth about alleged antisemitism”. We highlighted three problems:

repeated public statements by party leaders lending our voice to constant media allegations that the Labour Party was a den of rampant left-wing antisemitism; we attached hard statistical evidence that they were based on unproven and unsourced information, and were stifling rational debate about both Israel/Palestine and the dangers of antisemitism and racism.

the party’s federal board had unreasonably suspended ‘Liberal Democrat Friends of Palestine’ (LDFP), alleging antisemitism, mainly on account of LDFP posting on its website a link to an article pointing out that a pro-Israel donor was funding the breakaway Independent Group (TIG) of MPs. The federal board provided no evidence that the article was in any way inaccurate or antisemitic in intent.

(TIG) of MPs. The federal board provided no evidence that the article was in any way inaccurate or antisemitic in intent. The Party had uncritically adopted the International Holocaust Remembrance Association (IHRA) definition of antisemitism with its eleven ‘examples’, notwithstanding weighty evidence that pro-Israel lobbyists and media allies were using it to shield Israel’s Zionist doctrine (supported by many millions of US “Christian Zionists”) from any criticism, and close down free speech on Israel and Palestine (see here for example). We advocated reverting to a simple OED-type definition like hostile to or prejudiced against Jews.

We did not get any response from the Party leadership, but tried to get the topic discussed on four different Lib Dem online forums, only to find ourselves shut out of one platform after another. On one of them, Party activists and officers subjected us and others to troll-like abuse. We have formally complained about our treatment but, having seen no action since 16 June, are not holding our breath.

The federal board has now reinstated LDFP, but under unjustified and humiliating conditions that will make it much harder for it to speak truth to power and question the IHRA definition.

Our party leaders need to rise to the challenge

The recent leadership campaign provided the party leaders with an opportunity to reset its compass on this topic, but they instead continued giving credence to the idea that the Labour Party is a den of antisemitism, notably at a hustings on 10 July and in answers to questions from Liberal Democrat Friends of Israel (LDFI). At the hustings, Jo Swinson spoke of Jewish people leaving the country if Jeremy Corbyn is elected prime minister.

At another event on 1 July, the ex-Labour ex-TIG MP Chuka Umunna baldly accused Labour of being “racist”; earlier statements show that he meant Labour was “institutionally antisemitic”. In taking this position, Umunna contradicted a statement he made in 2016, to the effect that Labour was not institutionally antisemitic and that he had not seen a single case in his local party in over 20 years.

A Huffington Post article reported Jo Swinson accusing Jeremy Corbyn of using “'Disgusting' Trump-Style Spin” in criticising the Panorama documentary entitled “Is Labour antisemitic?” Many viewers may have been taken in by this documentary, but Lib Dems needed to exercise more diligence and critically review what others have said before making any public judgements.

A series of authors have analysed the documentary and found it biased and unprofessional. This group of Cambridge Labour party members have revealed a litany of shortcomings involving unreliable or disreputable witnesses, untruthful statements, failure to platform alternative views and expert opinion, double standards regarding so-called “gagging orders”, and the selective use of material. No less than eight of those interviewed as witnesses to “antisemitic incidents” are office-holders or former office-holders in the Jewish Labour Movement (JLM), a partisan group affiliated to the World Zionist Organization which funds illegal Jewish settlements on Palestinian land. Amazingly, the makers of the documentary concealed the names of all but one of these individuals, and at no time mentioned their JLM affiliations.

The Media Reform Coalition analysed the documentary and found serious shortcomings in relation to the BBC’s own editorial guidelines for impartiality and accuracy, going on to say that the BBC’s principal failure was its unwillingness to acknowledge important errors of judgment in making the programme.

We could have more easily understood the approach of leading Lib Dems if they had simply avoided adopting a position on antisemitism allegations during the leadership campaign, and taken their time to study the evidence. It is a pity they launched into an ill-judged and uncritical endorsement of allegations against the Labour Party.