Untitled Document
I was elected mayor by the people of London and only they should have
the power to remove me
At least one thing can be said about my possible suspension from office, which
was put on hold by the high court yesterday: people from across the political
spectrum have come to the defence of the basic democratic principle that those
elected by the people should only be removed by the voters.
Last week, an adjudication tribunal found that some of my comments to an Evening
Standard journalist had been "unnecessarily insensitive" and "offensive".
But those are not grounds for overturning the decision of the voters of London.
As far as I am aware, there is no law against "unnecessary insensitivity"
or even "offensiveness" to journalists questioning you as you try
to go home.
However, there has been an unstated allegation in this case: the implicit suggestion
that my comment was anti-semitic. It is not explicitly stated because it cannot
be substantiated. But the innuendo is used to give weight to charges otherwise
too trivial to merit this gigantic fuss.
The truth is that I have appointed black, Asian and Jewish people to the highest
levels of my administration and waged an unrelenting war on every manifestation
of racism, anti-semitism and every other kind of discrimination. Since I have
been mayor, racial and religiously motivated incidents in the capital have declined
by more than a third. Of course, there is still a problem. A Jewish person is
three times more likely to suffer a racist attack than a "white European".
A person of African, Caribbean or south Asian descent is 10 times more likely
to suffer a racist attack. And an Arab person is 11 times more likely to suffer
a racist attack in London today. But significant progress has been made against
the trend that is taking place elsewhere in Europe.
Associated Newspapers has always led the charge against the policies that confront
racism and anti-semitism. It praised the Blackshirts in the 1930s, and admits
that as recently as the retirement party of the last editor of the Daily Mail,
two of its staff dressed in Nazi uniforms and were not asked to leave.
The Board of Deputies, which referred me to the Standards Board, has at all
times protested that this issue is just about how I treated one reporter who
happens to be Jewish. I have never believed a word of it. Some time before this
incident was blown up out of all proportion, the Board of Deputies asked to
meet me to urge me to tone down my views on the Israeli government.
For far too long the accusation of anti-semitism has been used against anyone
who is critical of the policies of the Israeli government, as I have been. Even
Tony Blair was recently described as a "common anti-semite" in an
Israeli newspaper. Being Jewish is no defence from this charge. The famous Israeli
conductor and pianist Daniel Barenboim was recently denounced by an Israeli
minister as "a real Jew hater, a real anti-semite". Antony Lerman,
director of the Institute for Jewish Policy Research, has said that equating
criticism of Israel policies with anti-semitism "drains the word anti-semitism
of any useful meaning".
There is at least one positive clarification that has come out of this whole
affair: Jon Benjamin, the director general of the Board of Deputies, stated
last week: "We've never said the mayor is anti-semitic."
The fundamental issue in this whole affair is not whether or not I was "insensitive",
it is the principle that those whom the people elect should only be removed
by the people or because they have broken the law. It's because this fundamental
principle is at stake that I am going to do everything in my power to have this
attack on the democratic rights of Londoners overturned.
· Ken Livingstone is mayor of London.
mayor@london.gov.uk