Only problem for Jezza was the UK electorate couldnât tolerate him.
The UK electorate have been conditioned by the media to value bigotry and avarice over common human decency
As a Conservative and Unionist party supporter I thought Jezza was a godsend and I was very sorry to see him go.
If I was a Labour supporter Iâd be doing a little bit more soul searching than blaming the meeja as to why Corbyn presided over the worst electoral performance since the 1930âs.
The big issue of his time was Brexit. His half hearted, mealy mouthed support for a Remain vote when the majority of the party membership were behind it was a serious fuck up. If heâd got the Labour Party solidly and coherently behind it, Remain would most likely have won. His intransigence then in the Brexit negotiations and failure to engage with Prime Minister May finished off any prospect of a soft Brexit.
Hardline Marxist ideology and cheerleading for despotic Marxist brutes like Castro and Chavez or terrorists like the IRA is not an election winner or even a vote winner in what should be the safest of safe Labour seats along the Red Wall in the North of England.
Mind he did piss your boys off.
You didnât address the point made.
Be gentle with him, @ChairmanDan and his pals in the orange order thought Jezza was a âGodsendâ but it was their hero BorisTheButcher who sold them down the river. No wonder heâs so confused
The Jezza fanboys have a point?
Shameful. The lads who fell for it all want a good hard look at themselves
The killing of Jeremy Corbyn
5 June 2020 08:58 UTC | Last update: 4 sec ago
The former Labour leader was the victim of a carefully planned and brutally executed political assassination
Former Labour Leader Jeremy Corbyn (Reuters)
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Throughout his parliamentary career, the mild mannered, infuriatingly calm Jeremy Corbyn has never failed to excite strong emotions.
For his enemies, he will go down as one of Labourâs worst leaders. He failed to unite his party. He sent too many contradictory messages on Brexit, which was the greatest issue of his time. He never dealt with Labourâs antisemitism problem. And he ultimately went down to a catastrophic defeat in the 2019 general election.
For an equally vociferous and ardent army of his supporters, Corbyn tripled party membership, banished austerity, shifted the mainstream political discourse leftwards, and presented a genuinely radical alternative to the quagmire of post-industrial capitalism.
Truthful journalism
We donât hold a candle for Corbyn.
Neither of us are Labour Party members, and indeed one of us has worked as a political correspondent and commentator for The Spectator, The Daily Telegraph and The Daily Mail, three stalwarts of Tory opinion-making. Both of us care greatly about accurate, truthful journalism. Both of us, as British citizens, cherish the tradition of fair play and decency.
We believe everyone should be concerned about the picture painted of Corbyn by the British media for the four years he was leader
That is why we believe everyone should be concerned about the picture painted of Corbyn by the British media for the four years he was leader.
Corbyn was never the monstrous figure presented to the British people. He was never a Marxist. He was not hell-bent on the destruction of Western capitalism. He was a socialist. Nor was he an antisemite, and there is no serious evidence which suggests that he was, though we certainly do not absolve him of poor judgement, for instance in joining various internet forums in his years on the backbenches.
And he was not a divisive figure - the claim made against him by so many of his right-wing opponents.
Political assassination
Indeed, one of Corbynâs problems was that he was too soft with his internal enemies as he tried to unite the Labour Party after his shock leadership victory in 2015. He was a flawed politician who made mistakes.
We wanted to give Corbyn a chance, which was largely denied him as Labour leader, to tell his side of the story
But he also possessed personal decency and authenticity, which has scarcely been acknowledged amidst the thousands of hatchet jobs conducted against him in the press and wider media. That is why we thought it was important to conduct the first major interview with Corbyn since he stepped down as Labour leader on 3 April this year.
We wanted to give him a chance, which was largely denied him as Labour leader, to tell his side of the story. We also wanted to expose one sombre truth; Corbyn was the victim of a carefully planned and brutally executed political assassination.
He was never given a chance. Not by the bulk of Labourâs parliamentary party and many officials, some of whom (we are now learning) campaigned harder against their elected leader than they did against the Tory government. Not by senior figures connected to the British state, including former spy chiefs, military officers and civil servants, all of whom should have known much better.
Take the claim that Corbynâs director of strategy Seumas Milne would not get security clearance at 10 Downing Street because he âhobnobbedâ with Putin.
Protesters hold placards and flags during a demonstration, organised by the British Board of Jewish Deputies for those who oppose antisemitism in London on 26 March 2018 (Reuters)
The former head of MI6, Sir Richard Dearlove, told the Mail on Sunday: âAnyone with his sort of background could not be let anywhere near classified information. It would be out of the question,â Dearlove said.
âThat means Corbyn could not make the judgments and decisions a PM has to make unless he stopped consulting him.â Dearloveâs successor at MI6 and former chairman of the Joint Intelligence Committee, Sir John Scarlett âhobnobbedâ with Putin and took his hospitality at the Valdai Club the year before Milne went.
One of us had a drink in a bar in Moscow with a supremely relaxed Scarlett who evidently enjoyed his time talking to Putin and his mates.
Falsehoods and misrepresentations
Lie after lie was told about Corbyn, day after day, month after month. For the last four years very few journalists have bothered to do their job to fact-check the claims and report fairly on him.
Jeremy Corbyn: British media waged campaign to destroy me
In our review of Tom Bowerâs book âA Dangerous Heroâ, we investigated and exposed a farrago of falsehoods and misrepresentations in what was presented as a major biography of the Labour leader published by Harper Collins, one of Britainâs most significant publishers.
We showed how Bower misrepresented a meeting of the Palestinian Return Centre (PRC). Bower accused the PRC of being a group that blamed Jews for the Holocaust. Nobody affiliated with the PRC has ever expressed such views, as was accepted by an inquiry led by the Commissioner of Standards.
Harper Collins and Bower agreed not to repeat the allegation. The Mail on Sunday, which lavishly serialised Bowerâs book, withdrew the allegation and apologised. The point to note here is that when such claims face the prospect of being examined properly in a court of law by judges who are led by facts and evidence and who conduct their inquiry with due process, they tend to fall apart.
Sir Keir Starmer, a barrister by training, please note: due process matters. It has been absent for the last four years in the party you now head. We showed how Bower misrepresented Corbynâs dealings with the National Health Service (NHS). He reports that the junior doctor strikes organised by the British Medical Association (BMA) in 2016 were âunder the control of Momentumâ.
Both the BMA and Momentum denied this. The BMA said "there is no evidence to suggest this was the case.â Bower certainly didnât provide any. We showed how Bower misrepresented a confrontation between Labour activist Marc Wadsworth and Labour MP Ruth Smeeth at the launch for Shami Chakrabartiâs report on antisemitism in June 2016.
Supporters hold placards as Britainâs opposition Labour party leader Jeremy Corbyn addresses a rally calling for a General Election now, in Parliament Square, central London on 25 July, 2019 (AFP)
This was another incident seized upon by the media to attack Corbyn. Bower writes that âWadsworth snapped at her that not only was she âworking hand-in-handâ with the right-wing media by speaking to the journalist, but she was also a Jewâ.
The brief incident is recorded on video. Nowhere in the footage does Wadsworth say that Smeeth is Jewish. MEE spoke to two eyewitnesses to this event, both of whom confirmed that at no point did Wadsworth say that Smeeth was Jewish.
Against all types of racism
As the election loomed, much of the press presented Boris Johnson, Corbynâs Tory opponent, as a national figure and a saviour of the nation.
Racism against any religious minority is unacceptable in our society and for that reason Islamophobia should just as ardently be hunted down and identified - wherever it appears
This â as the nation is learning the hard way â was as grievous a lie as anything told about Corbyn. By one of lifeâs strange ironies, Johnson, unlike Corbyn himself, has indeed been guilty of producing offensive antisemitic stereotypes.
A group of Jewish academics and campaigners pointed out that one of Johnsonâs novels invoked one of the most pernicious antisemitic stereotypes when he describes âJewish oligarchsâ who, in the words of the academics, ârun the media, and fiddle the figures to fix elections in their favourâ.
As Corbyn told us, and we believe he is being sincere in this, antisemitism is an evil which has been tolerated and accepted for far too long in British society. It is, however, not the only form of racism tolerated in political circles. The fight against this scourge should not be party political, nor should the fight against racism be confined to racism against Jews.
Racism against any religious minority is unacceptable in our society and for that reason Islamophobia should just as ardently be hunted down and identified - wherever it appears. The two campaigns should go hand in hand. They should be in lockstep.
But they arenât.
Lynch mob justice
By another irony, once he had won the election, Johnson adopted a number of Corbynâs policies which he had previously denounced as unworkable.
âHow top Labour officials plotted to bring down Jeremy Corbyn
Since becoming prime minister, Johnson has abandoned planned cuts in corporation tax, announced plans to nationalise Northern Rail and announced ÂŁ100bn funding for infrastructure projects.
The heritage of the British press means what appears in its columns carry a weight far greater than remarks made casually in a pub or a workplace. Itâs very hard to see how any decent person reading much of the newspapers or absorbing the broadcasting coverage of the last few years could have possibly voted for Jeremy Corbyn.
Indeed, Corbyn said as much in his interview with MEE, noting the coverage was so hostile that even he would ânot want to live on the same streetâ as the man he read about in some British newspapers. The media abandoned any form of the objectivity or fact-checking they apply to almost everyone else.
Accusers became judge, jury and executioner.
There was no due process, no independent inquiry after the facts, no suspension of judgement until the facts were uncovered. Within seconds, the accusation became the new reality. This was lynch mob justice.
The mob have got their way. Corbyn is back to where he was at the start of this bizarre journey, an MP well respected locally in North Islington and on the back benches. His allies have been purged from the front benches.
But this episode should concern all of us who believe in means as well as ends. The simple question that any MP of whatever political shade should ask themselves is what they would do, how they would feel, if the same tactics were used against them. They would scream foul. They would be right.
This kind of mob politics threatens democracy itself because without truthful and honest public discourse, dark forces make their presence felt.
The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Eye.
The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Eye.The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Eye.
Ah Laz, even the fruit-loops wonât stand over this article
A standard media disclaimer. Whatâs your point here?
Another pointless contribution. Its clear the mob who brought into the media assassination cannot back up their irrational hatred of a decent hardworking man. They cannot justify their hate because there is no justification for it. To be so weakminded is to be putty in the hand of the british press
Shur wasnât I empathising with you there on that last post?
You need to stop believing everything you read in The Sun
Corbyn the useless cunt is the reason the UK is in the state it is in. A peoper labour leader would have won the last election by a landslide
Shur what are you having a go at me for. I said nothin only posted up an aul gif in sympathy with you
Pesky electorate not electing Corbyn.
Theyâre sorry now
Why dont the people of the UK, or the US for that matter, vote for the correct people? Stupid democracy always getting in the way