Category: Non-EU Countries

  • The Jewish vote really does count

    The Jewish vote really does count

    History suggests British Jewish leaders are wrong to shy away from the notion of distinctive voting patterns among Jews

    aldermanGeoffrey Alderman

    In the early 1970s, as I researched a textbook on the British electoral system, I became aware of a very significant gap in the then existing literature on voting habits among the British electorate. A great deal of material existed, naturally, on socio-economic class and its electoral impact. There was some material – not as much as there might have been – on the relationship between religion and voting. And some research had been carried out into the Irish vote – research that was principally an offshoot of the much greater body of research into “the Irish question”. But on the relationship between ethnicity and voting there was very little indeed. I was determined to repair this omission, and began polling Jewish voting intentions in selected London constituencies.

    A phone call reached me from an organisation calling itself the Board of Deputies of British Jews. I was invited to lunch with its so-called defence department. And at that lunch I was ordered – repeat ordered – to cease forthwith my investigation of Jewish voting habits. Jews, I was told, voted just like everyone else. To poll a sample of Jews was to poll a sample of “ordinary” voters – no more and no less. So what was the point of my efforts? Besides, my hosts added, to ask how Jews were going to vote, or had voted, was to plant in the minds of the non-Jewish community, among whom we British Jews lived, the idea that Jews were not fully integrated into British society. I was told that Jews, in fact, were fully integrated. There was, therefore, no “Jewish dimension” to an election, and to suggest otherwise was to place the entirety of British Jewry in some (ill-defined) jeopardy.

    I did not pay attention to these strictures. Or rather, I did pay attention to them, but only as evidence that could help me answer the question why the Jewish vote in British politics had been so poorly researched. Within British Jewry, image is everything. And the fact was that for generations, the fathers of the community had decreed that there must be no hint of a special, distinctive “Jewish” vote in the British body politic.

    History, however, tells a different story. The votes of Jewish electors played a pivotal role in the epic struggle of Lionel de Rothschild (1847-58) to enter the House of Commons as a professing Jew, because the constituency for which he repeatedly stood – the City of London – contained several hundred Jewish businessmen who qualified for the property-related franchise. The parliamentary career of Samuel Montagu, a Yiddish speaking banker, was built on his relationship with his Jewish electors in that most Jewish of constituencies, Whitechapel, for which he sat as Liberal MP 1885-1900. The near-defeat of the Labour candidate at the Whitechapel by-election of November-December 1930 was a major factor in the decision of Ramsay Macdonald’s minority Labour government to ditch its anti-Zionist policy in Palestine.

    The Jewish vote was pivotal to the 1945 victory of Britain’s last Communist MP, Phil Piratin, at Stepney, but it was equally pivotal to the defeat of Maurice Orbach (a self-proclaimed Labour Zionist who had conspicuously failed to support Israel during the Suez crisis) at East Willesden in 1959. In February 1974, his Jewish electors saved John Gorst, a gentile Zionist, from defeat at Hendon North. Four years later, on the other side of London, the Jews gave the Conservative candidate a resounding victory at a dramatic by-election at Ilford North, where Sir Keith Joseph had openly – and most successfully – campaigned for his Jewish brethren to support Thatcherite economic and immigration policies.

    What of the present electoral contest? Jews, however defined, form no more than half of one percent of the UK population, but they are heavily concentrated in London and Manchester. Of the constituencies in which Jews account for at least 10% of the population, seven are Labour held. One of these – Finchley & Golders Green – is so highly marginal that it seems bound to be lost to the Conservatives irrespective of any special Jewish factor.

    But in another, the adjacent Hendon seat, which could fall to the Tories on a swing of about 3.8%, there is an ongoing battle for the Jewish vote.Andrew Dismore, who has held the seat for Labour since 1997, has impeccable Zionist credentials (he would not otherwise have become MP for Hendon), but his constituency standing has been undermined by the Labour’s government’s failure to amend the “universal jurisdiction” law, which currently permits private citizens to apply for the arrest of prominent Israeli politicians who set foot on British soil, and by David Miliband’s recent condemnation of Israel over the use of fake British passports in the Dubai assassination of a senior Hamas terrorist. To add to Dismore’s woes, the Muslim Public Affairs Committee is encouraging its supporters in Hendon to vote for anyone but him. So a curious combination of Jewish votes and Muslim votes for Matthew Offord, his Conservative challenger, could hand the seat to the Tories.

    But in a nationwide political contest as knife-edge as the present one appears to be, it isn’t only in recognisably “Jewish” constituencies that Jewish votes count. Jewish voters might prove critical to outcomes in seats as far apart as “Jewish” Bury South (where Ivan Lewis, Miliband’s second-in-command, is facing a very strong challenge from Michelle Wiseman, chief executive of Manchester Jewish Community Care) and East Renfrewshire, Glasgow, in which the comparatively tiny Jewish community may be persuaded to save Jim Murphy, the Scottish secretary, who is, naturally, a leading light in Labour Friends of Israel.

    Whatever the present Anglo-Jewish leadership may wish, the Jewish vote, in other words, is very much alive and well.

    https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2010/apr/19/jewish-vote-really-does-count, 19 April 2010

  • Hendon candidate says he is ‘worried’ by intervention in election campaign

    Hendon candidate says he is ‘worried’ by intervention in election campaign

    http://www.dismore4hendon.com/uploads/968e6b61-076b-85c4-d5b3-21859d4939c5.jpg
    Andrew Dismore with Israeli Ambassador Ron Prosser, at Trafalgar Square

    By Alex Hayes

    THE Labour candidate for the Hendon Parliamentary seat has said the intervention of an anti-Zionist Muslim group in his election campaign is “worrying”.

    Andrew Dismore has been attacked by the Muslim Public Affairs Committee (MPAC) for his pro-Zionist views and record in Parliament.

    After a hustings at Hendon Mosque the group distributed 2,000 leaflets urging people not to vote for Mr Dismore, who is vice chairman of the Labour Friends of Israel, and instead vote for the Lib Dems or Tories.

    Mr Dismore said: “What’s worrying is this intervention in the election runs the risk of creating real divisions in the community.

    “We’ve had traditionally good relations between the communities in Hendon and we could do without this interference from outsiders.

    “I suspect there’s nothing between us on the politics of Palestine.”

    Lib Dem candidate Matthew Harris, a vice chariman of his party’s Friends of Israel, has also rejected the backing of the group.

    In a statement on his website he said: “I am pleased and proud to be a friend of Israel, campaigning for a two-state solution that will bring peace, justice and security to Palestinans and Israelis alike.

    “I strongly dislike MPAC’s policies and its campaigning methods. But if anyone is thinking of voting for me because MPAC has advised them to vote Lib Dem or Tory as a way of ousting Hendon’s Labour MP, I would advise them to vote for someone else – I reject MPAC’s support.”

    However, Tahir Shah, a spokesman for MPAC, said the group were not against Jewish people, but opposed Zionists.

    He said: “Whatever faith the candidates are makes no difference politically. We are against Andrew Dismore’s record in Parliament.

    “He has shown hostility towards the people of Palestine with his voting record.”

    Mr Shah said MPAC’s focus was to get more Muslims involved in politics with the major parties to prevent extremism in the community.

    12th April 2010

    http://www.dismore4hendon.com/uploads/e86a9b30-a2ca-5244-bddc-78f39e77b62c.jpg
    Andrew with Board of Deputies of British Jews President Henry Grunwald QC
  • Flights between TÜRKİYE and UK are cancelled

    Flights between TÜRKİYE and UK are cancelled

    Flights across the north of Europe and  UK have been grounded for a second day as volcanic ash from Iceland drifts across Europe, posing a potential threat to aircraft. Flights between Turkey and UK are also grounded due to the potential threat to aircraft safety.

    Volcanic eruption

    Airports remain closed to passengers and air traffic control company NATS has warned restrictions are due to remain in place until 7pm at the earliest.

    In a statement, NATS said: “The cloud of volcanic ash continues to cover much of the UK and the eruption in Iceland continues.The statement continued: “In general, the situation cannot be said to be improving with any certainty as the forecast affected area appears to be closing in from east to west.
    “We continue to work closely with airports, airlines, and the rest of Europe to understand and mitigate the implications of the volcanic eruption.”

    These reports clearly indicate that volcanic eruption will continue to effect thousands of passengers around the world.

    Tolga Cakir

    email: tolga1cakir@yahoo.co.uk

  • British Prime Minister Gordon Brown visits Leeds

    British Prime Minister Gordon Brown visits Leeds

    Prime minister confronted by Yeadon GP during today’s visit to city

    A Yeadon GP gave Prime Minister Gordon Brown a fiery Leeds welcome today as Labour’s election campaign came to the city.

    Gordon brown

    Doctor Andrew Wright from Yeadon Health Centre this morning expressed his scepticism about Labour’s proposal to devolve more cancer diagnostic services from hospitals to health centres.

    My Guardian colleague Paul Lewis – who you can follow on Twitter @paul_lewis – is on Brown’s election bus and was at the event to file a report.

    Click on the link to find out more about the confrontation with Brown.

    You can also follow the latest on national politics and the election by following @GdnPolitics.

    Over at The Times, Brown denied any admission of failure over a ‘failure’ to regulate banks while speaking on this morning’s campaign visit to Leeds.

    Over at the YEP, they report how Brown today paid a surprise visit to an 82-year-old Labour supporter in her Yeadon home. On a scheduled visit to Yeadon Health Centre, Alice Thompson’s doctor had told the Prime Minister she had wanted to meet him there but was not able to leave her home, a short distance away.

    BBC Leeds has also updated its site with the story of Brown visiting Alica Thompson.

    Posted by John Baron Wednesday 14 April 2010 13.36 BST

    The Guardian

  • Leeds football coach has been suspended after head butting a referee

    Leeds football coach has been suspended after head butting a referee

    A junior football coach has been suspended after being accused of head butting a referee at an under 12s match in Leeds.And police and the Football Association both launched inquiries into the incident.
    Jonathan Rimmington, 44, says he is fighting to clear his name after what he describes as a stand-off with the match official.
    The dad-of-two was quizzed by police over the allegations but has been cleared by them of any wrong-doing.
    However the FA has banned him from taking charge of his Rothwell Juniors under 12s team since the incident on February 14.
    Mr Rimmington has now appointed a solicitor ahead of an FA disciplinary hearing in a bid to get the ban overturned and clear his name.
    He denies the attack, instead claiming he was left injured in the clash.
    Mr Rimmington, from Birstall, told the YEP: “The whole affair is an absolutely disgraceful advertisement for junior football in this city.
    “I have been cleared by the police but it still feels like a case of me being guilty until proved innocent because of this FA ban.”
    Trouble flared after Mr Rimmington was ordered to leave the pitch after he went on to help one of his injured players.
    The game, played at Springbank Primary School, Farsley, between Farsley Celtic and Rothwell was abandoned six minutes into the match because of the injury.
    The later incident is alleged to have happened when Mr Rimmington approached the referee on the road next to pitch as he went to his car.
    Mr Rimmington added that problems started earlier: “The grass was six inches long on the pitch and there were holes all over the place.
    “I felt it wasn’t safe and told the referee but he just told me to go away and I think we got off on the wrong footing from the start.
    “We are in charge of growing lads and have to look after them properly, they are always my main concern.
    “This has really upset them. They are getting a lot of stick because of what has happened.”
    A West Yorkshire Police spokesman confirmed the matter had been investigated and a file was passed to the Crown Prosecution Service but no further action was taken. John Riorden, governance manger for the West Riding County FA, said: “A disciplinary hearing was set up but Mr Rimmington was not available to attend. Another hearing will be arranged at a more convenient time so the matter can be dealt with.
    The YEP reported two years ago how Mr Rimmington’s team, then an under 10s said, were dubbed the ‘mini Arsenal’ because of their success in the Garforth and District junior football league.
    They were unbeaten and won the league with eight games to spare.
    More than half the team trained with the Leeds United academy and scouts from professional clubs were regularly spotted watching from the touchlines at their home games.
    Professional clubs including Manchester City, Oldham and Sheffield United have already expressed an interest in the several of the talented crop of youngsters.

    Yorkshire Evening Post

  • Bomb explodes near N Ireland MI5 base

    Bomb explodes near N Ireland MI5 base

    The Real IRA has admitted it was behind a car bomb which exploded outside MI5’s Northern Ireland headquarters.

    Palace

    The blast seems to have been timed to coincide with the precise moment that policing and justice powers devolved from Westminster to Stormont.

    It happened at about 0020 BST outside Palace Barracks, in Holywood, County Down. Police said no warning was given.

    The bomb went off as the surrounding area was being evacuated. An elderly man was treated for minor injuries.

    The bomb was placed in a taxi, which had been hijacked in the Ligoniel area of north Belfast, about seven miles from Holywood, at about 2150 BST.

    The driver was held hostage by three men for about two hours before being told to drive his taxi to the barracks.

    The vehicle was abandoned at the base just before midnight prompting police and security staff to evacuate the area. The bomb exploded about 20 minutes later as the evacuation was still taking place.

    An elderly man walking near the barracks at the time of the explosion was treated in hospital for minor injuries.

    There were two explosions – first the bomb and then the petrol tank, destroying the car and damaging other property.

    Chief Superintendent Nigel Grimshaw said the police had not received a telephoned warning about the attack.

    He said the taxi used was destroyed in the “significant explosion”.

    The senior officer visited the scene on Sunday night.

    “I saw young children in the arms of mothers and fathers, where we had moved people from the community into a local community centre – that’s the type of people who were affected by this totally callous act.

    “There is no question in my mind that it was designed to kill or seriously injure and that’s exactly what would have happened, were it not for the actions of my officers, military colleagues and indeed the community themselves who co-operated fully with us.”

    Up to 60 people were moved from their homes and spent the night in a community centre.

    The attack appears to have been timed to coincide with the transfer of policing and justice powers from London to Belfast.

    Northern Ireland Secretary Shaun Woodward said this “democratic transition stands in stark contrast to the activity of a criminal few who will not accept the will of the majority of people of Northern Ireland”.

    “They have no support anywhere,” he added.

    BBC