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Starmer ditches Palestinian recognition

LABOUR will recognise a Palestinian state when it gets permission from Israel to do so, Sir Keir Starmer has announced in his latest abandonment of progressive international commitments. 

Ditching a policy dating back a decade to Ed Miliband’s leadership, the Labour leader has announced that the party in government will no longer join nearly 140 other countries around the world in recognising the state of Palestine.  

According to a report in the Jewish Chronicle, Sir Keir said at the weekend that “recognition has to be part of a process, and an appropriate part of the process.” 

What that meant was spelt out by shadow foreign office minister Wayne David, who said Labour would “recognise the state of Palestine at a point which will help the peace process once negotiations between Israel and Palestine and the others are taking place.” 

Calling Labour’s previous position of recognition of Palestine independently of any supposed peace process “T-shirt politics,” Mr David elaborated that recognition had to come to “fruition in a way which is acceptable to the state of Israel.  

“That is the way to bring about peace — a mutually agreed two-state solution,” he said, indicating that no-one should hold their breath in anticipation.

“It will require negotiations of great detail over a long period of time. There are many complex issues to be sorted out,” Mr David explained. 

The decision is of a piece with Sir Keir’s unstinting support for Israel in its murderous assault on the Palestinians of Gaza, although Labour MPs are increasingly finding their voices to speak against it. 

As well as abandoning Palestinian recognition, Sir Keir also U-turned at the weekend over stopping arms sales to Saudi Arabia — now merely to be reviewed — and giving MPs a vote before embarking on military action.

Labour MP Zarah Sultana has slammed PM Rishi Sunak and back-bench Tory MP Andrew Percy for using “Islamophobic tropes” against her after she called for de-escalation in the Middle East in the Commons. 

The Prime Minister responded by telling her to “call on Hamas and the Houthis to de-escalate the situation,” as if Ms Sultana was a representative of the two movements, while Mr Percy accused her of giving “a free pass to terrorists.” 

Ms Sultana tweeted that this was “just another day as a Muslim MP.”  

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