Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales launched a foul attack on Jeremy Corbyn and the Labour Party on 4 July. On social media, Wales called on people to “get on board with kicking out” Labour’s “antisemitic leadership”.

But the charge that Corbyn and his team are antisemitic is a gross reversal of reality. From signing many parliamentary motions condemning antisemitism to campaigning to save a Jewish cemetery, Corbyn has consistently stood against antisemitism throughout his political career.

“Ignorant and insulting”

Some Jewish Labour supporters were unapologetic in their response to Wales. One, for example, wrote:

.@jimmy_wales

I am a Jew. I support Corbyn.

Your “joke” is ignorant & insulting.

Corbyn is one of the greatest campaigners against prejudice & discrimination of his generation, including against antisemitism His enemies hate his

1 Socialism

2 Support for Palestinian Rights https://t.co/AvTYrAemUG — Tom London (@TomLondon6) July 5, 2019

For the record, here is a sample of the times Corbyn has stood with Jewish people over the years:

On 22 June 2015, Corbyn signed a parliamentary motion praising the London Jewish Forum for standing up to racist marches.

On 9 January 2014, he signed a parliamentary motion paying tribute to survivors and victims of the genocide waged against Jewish people during World War II.

On 2 July 2009, he signed a parliamentary motion celebrating Bradford Reform Synagogue obtaining Grade II building status for its “architectural merit”.

On 26 February 2009, he signed a parliamentary motion condemning “vile and anti-Semitic” content on the internet.

On 7 November 1990, he signed a motion questioning why 21 publications posting antisemitic content had resulted in no prosecutions.

Wales and centrists: ‘the far right and Labour leadership are the same’

The Wikipedia founder didn’t stop there, though.

Apparently, Corbyn’s programme of social housing, free education and a green new deal is the “same level of horribleness” as Boris Johnson’s Muslim-scapegoating agenda:

I tend to agree on the second point and thanks for the kind words on the first point! My view is that the far left coming into power would be about the same level of horribleness just in a different way. It's a mad time. — Jimmy Wales (@jimmy_wales) July 4, 2019

Channel 4 journalist Michael Crick has peddled a similar comparison:

This is the dumbest shit I’ve ever seen on this website. Crick’s coverage of the Labour leadership has been consistently embarrassing. pic.twitter.com/GgAkJmhkwQ — Aaron Bastani (@AaronBastani) June 25, 2019

And so has LBC host James O’Brien, who likened Corbyn supporters to people who back Donald Trump:

Today seems to have been Jeremy Corbyn’s “I could stand in the middle of Fifth Avenue & shoot somebody & I wouldn’t lose voters,” moment. Let’s hope that his ‘base’ has more intellectual integrity than Trump’s. I still can’t quite believe that I’m far from sure it does. — James O'Brien (@mrjamesob) August 13, 2018

In other words, centrists are equating pro-austerity right-wingers with the Labour leadership and those opposing the discredited and damaging ideology of endless budget cuts. It’s a world where supporting war is somehow the same as opposing it, where inequality and equality are somehow just as bad as each other, and where climate destruction is somehow on a par with climate protection. What a topsy-turvy outlook. A recent UN Human Rights Council report, for instance, states that “policies of austerity introduced in 2010” have had “tragic social consequences”. According to UN special rapporteur on extreme poverty Philip Alston, the Conservative and Lib Dem austerity coalition had “crystal clear” results:

14 million people living in poverty, record levels of hunger and homelessness, falling life expectancy for some groups, ever fewer community services, and greatly reduced policing, while access to the courts for lower-income groups has been dramatically rolled back by cuts to legal aid.

With this in mind, the comparisons from Wales and the centrists are intellectually and morally barren. It’s sickening to equate Corbyn, his supporters and others trying to end destructive legislation with the very architects behind it. But Wales went further; he also smeared the Labour leadership as ‘antisemitic’ even though all the evidence shows Corbyn has campaigned against all forms of racism since the 1980s.

This is embarrassing, fact-free and stomach-churning behaviour that has serious consequences for those suffering under austerity.

Featured image via Dernières Nouvelles/ YouTube and Guardian News/ YouTube