For the past month Jeremy Corbyn, the British MP and democratic socialist who just won the election to lead the U.K.’s Labour Party in a landslide, has been vociferously accused across the British media of associating with political figures who are anti-Semitic. “The problem,” according to the Community Security Trust, a U.K. Jewish organization, “is not that Corbyn is an anti-Semite or a Holocaust denier — he is neither. The problem is that he seems to gravitate towards people who are, if they come with an anti-Israel sticker on them.” Similarly, political journalist James Bloodworth wrote in the Guardian, “While I genuinely believe Corbyn does not have an anti-Semitic bone in his body, he does have a proclivity for sharing platforms with individuals who do.” The right-wing Telegraph got so excited it falsely claimed that another Labour MP had accused Corbyn himself of using “anti-Semitic rhetoric.” Corbyn was forced to repeatedly respond in several venues. Beyond addressing the specific issues, he’s made several statements such as, “I’ve spent my life opposing racism. Until my dying day, I’ll be opposed to racism in any form. … Anti-Semitism, Islamophobia, far-right racism is totally wrong and absolutely obnoxious and I’ve made that absolutely clear to everybody who will listen to me on this subject.” And Corbyn’s spokesperson said that anyone found by the Labour Party’s procedures committee to be responsible for anti-Semitism should not be allowed to vote in the leadership election. The most interesting part of the Corbyn fracas isn’t whether he’s “guilty” or not. It’s that the British media and politicians have created a guilt-by-association standard that appears to apply to Corbyn and Corbyn alone. If the same standard were applied to establishment politicians, they’d all be far more guilty than Corbyn. Such politicians regularly meet with, praise and/or give enormous material support to people who’ve said or done things at least as bigoted or appalling as Corbyn’s associates — and there’s nowhere near the same sustained outcry. Why? What accounts for the different reactions? To understand this, it’s useful to sort politicians’ associations into a few categories: • Politicians meeting with horrendous people when the politicians aren’t heads of state. Heads of state have less flexibility about whom they meet — and in fact arguably must meet with horrendous people. Corbyn, since he’s not the British Prime Minister, has more flexibility, yet has associated with figures with grievous flaws. But so has every establishment politician you could name.

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For instance, here’s David Cameron — in 2007, before he became Britain’s Prime Minister — having a happy meeting with a Palestinian leader who’s referred to the Holocaust as “the Zionist fantasy, the fantastic lie that six million Jews were killed.” That Palestinian leader, of course, is Mahmoud Abbas, president of the Palestinian Authority. Abbas later contradicted his earlier statements on the Holocaust, first calling it “a terrible thing” in 2003 (while being shifty about how many people died), and then in 2014 describing it as “the most heinous crime to have occurred against humanity in the modern era.” But Corbyn’s associate Raed Salah also repudiated his use of the notorious anti-Semitic blood libel, which has made no difference to those damning Corbyn. So if associating with Salah is wrong for Corbyn, associating with Abbas should have been just as wrong for Cameron (and dozens of other Western politicians).

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And here’s Tony Blair in 2010, three years after he stepped down as Prime Minster, receiving Kosovo’s “Golden Medal of Freedom.” The man standing next to him is Kosovo’s then-Prime Minister Hashim Thaci, whom the Council of Europe has accused of heading a crime ring that killed prisoners in order to sell their organs on the black market. (And here’s Thaci calling his friend Tony “a true hero.”) Since leaving office Blair also has reportedly been paid $13 million by Kazakhstan’s dictator Nursultan Nazarbayev, whose security forces have massacred and tortured regime opponents. • Politicians giving material support to horrendous people when the politicians are heads of state. Perhaps heads of state have to meet with their awful counterparts, but they don’t have to sell them Typhoon fighter jets. But that’s exactly what David Cameron has been anxious to do for Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. And Tony Blair killed an investigation into massive corruption involving the Saudi government and British arms manufacturer BAE. Yet it hardly needs to be said that the Saudi government-controlled media has long been a sewer of anti-Semitism. Arab Radio and Television of Saudi Arabia notoriously produced “Horseman Without a Horse,” a multi-part series that treated The Protocols of the Elders of Zion as historical fact. Saudi censors have blocked the website of the Anne Frank House in Amsterdam. For its part, the UAE is (according to Anti-Defamation League polling) one of the 10 most anti-Semitic countries on earth.

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And here’s Condoleezza Rice having a friendly meeting in 2006 with Lebanese Druze leader Walid Jumblatt. George W. Bush and Dick Cheney met with him the next year, with Cheney saying, “I admire the courageous stand he’s taking for freedom and democracy.” During this period Jumblatt’s party was part of the Lebanese government, which was receiving hundreds of millions of dollars in military aid from the U.S. even as Jumblatt asked for more Yet Jumblatt had made shockingly anti-Semitic statements on many previous occasions. After Paul Wolfowitz survived a rocket attack in Baghdad in 2003, Jumblatt stated: “We hope that next time the rockets will be more accurate and effective in getting rid of this virus and his like, who wreak corruption in Arab lands.” He’s claimed that the real axis of evil is one of “oil and Jews.” And after a suicide bombing in Gaza in 2004 he declared that “the fall of one Jew, whether soldier or civilian, is a great accomplishment.” • Politicians associating with people who aren’t generally recognized as horrendous enough to be shunned — but should be.

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