Pro-Palestine candidates dent Labour's UK election victory

Despite a landslide victory in Britain's parliamentary vote, Labour has been challenged successfully by candidates supporting Gaza's cause openly, appealing to the Muslim constituency in the country.

The UK general election was on July 4, 2024. The Labour Party displaced the Conservative Party, but did not do so well with Muslim voters. / Photo: Reuters
Reuters

The UK general election was on July 4, 2024. The Labour Party displaced the Conservative Party, but did not do so well with Muslim voters. / Photo: Reuters

Britain's Labour Party suffered significant election setbacks in areas with large Muslim populations amid discontent over its position on the war in Gaza, despite a landslide victory in the parliamentary vote.

The party, which has long counted on the backing of Muslim and other minority groups, on Friday saw its vote fall on average by 10 points in seats where more than 10 percent of the population identify as Muslim.

Jonathan Ashworth, who had been expected to serve in Keir Starmer's Labour government, lost his seat to independent Shockat Adam, one of at least four pro-Gaza candidates to win. Several other Labour candidates came close to losing.

"This is for the people of Gaza," Adam said, holding up a Palestinian keffiyeh scarf at the end of his acceptance speech on winning in the Leicester South constituency.

Pro-Gaza independents also won in Blackburn, and Dewsbury & Batley, beating Labour into second in both. Labour also failed to win in Islington North, where its former leader, veteran left-winger and ardent pro-Palestinian activist Jeremy Corbyn won as an independent.

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Calls for ceasefire

While Labour has said it wants the fighting in Gaza to stop, it has also backed Israel's right to defend itself, angering some among the 3.9 million Muslims who make up 6.5 percent of Britain's population.

Starmer has faced criticism for only gradually shifting towards calling for a ceasefire. While the party has committed to recognising a Palestinian state, it has not set out a definitive timetable for doing so.

A Savanta poll last month found that 44 percent of Muslim voters ranked the conflict as one of the top five issues and, of those, 86 percent said they would consider backing an independent running on the issue.

"The Muslim Vote" campaign called on voters to pick pro-Palestine candidates running as independents or from smaller parties like the left-wing Workers Party, which put up over 150 candidates. There were 230 more independent candidates than at the last election in 2019.

The Workers Party's outspoken leader George Galloway won a by-election in March for a vacant parliamentary seat in Rochdale, which has a big Muslim population, after Labour withdrew support from its candidate over a recording espousing conspiracy theories about Israel.

Labour won the seat back from Galloway on Friday.

Other Labour lawmakers only just held on to their seats, as they were challenged by pro-Gaza candidates.

Wes Streeting, Labour's health chief and a senior member of the party, won by just 528 votes over British-Palestinian Leanne Mohamad in Ilford North.

Jess Philipps beat the Workers Party candidate Jody McIntyre by just 693 votes and then struggled to give a speech amid booing and jeering by pro-Palestinian activists.

Philipps was one of several of leader Keir Starmer's "shadow cabinet" to leave their high-profile policy roles over the party's Gaza policies.

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