Keir Starmer is urged to challenge trade unions on their support for campaign group behind mass pro-Palestine rallies
- Chairman of the Conservative Party Greg Hands tells Labour to challenge unions
- He said Sir Keir Starmer should tell unions to drop ties to pro-Palestine group
- Palestine Solidarity Campaign has organised mass protests on Gaza
Sir Keir Starmer has been urged to challenge trade unions to sever ties with a campaign group behind mass pro-Palestine demonstrations.
The Labour leader was told to call on unions such as Unite, Unison and the GMB to ‘drop formal ties’ with the Palestine Solidarity Campaign (PSC) or risk ‘undermining’ the credibility of his response to the violence in Israel and Gaza.
Tory party chairman Greg Hands also demanded Sir Keir ask major Labour-affiliated unions not to march on Armistice Day this Saturday. Sir Keir has seen a rebellion from more than a dozen frontbenchers and hundreds of councillors over his refusal to call for a ceasefire, with many MPs defying orders not to join protests.
Mr Hands said the ‘extreme activist’ PSC, which has played a major part in organising the pro-Palestine rallies, ‘espouses views that encourage the anti-Semitism and violence we are witnessing’.
He wrote to Sir Keir: ‘Labour’s biggest trade union backers and affiliates are affiliated to the PSC, including Unite and the NEU. In fact, Aslef’s general secretary, Mick Whelan, appeared on the frontline at the PSC march held on 21 October – outwardly disobeying advice from Labour’s general secretary and marking a direct affiliation between the PSC and the Labour Party.’
The Conservative Party criticised Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer about trade unions’ ties to the Palestine Solidarity Campaign
Tory party chairman Greg Hands also demanded Sir Keir ask major Labour-affiliated unions not to march on Armistice Day this Saturday
A similar letter organised by the Campaign Against Antisemitism last week asked Sir Keir to ‘demonstrate leadership’ by requiring Labour-affiliated unions to withdraw support from the PSC. The letter read: ‘The continuing relationship between those unions that are officially affiliated to Labour and those same unions officially backing the organisers of Saturday’s marches undermines your response to the terrorist attacks on Israel.’
Last night Shadow Cabinet minister Lucy Powell denied the party was imploding over its stance on Gaza, despite Navendu Mishra becoming the 19th frontbencher to call for a ceasefire.
‘I would dispute that,’ she told GB News. ‘On the whole, everybody in the Labour Party is agreed on the fact that we want to see an end to the cycle of violence.’
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