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Starmer faces call to suspend Labour MP over ‘white supremacy’ Badenoch tweet

03 Nov 2024 2 minute read
Dawn Butler who is the Labour MP for Brent Central. Photo Richard Townshend/UK Parliament

Sir Keir Starmer has come under pressure to remove the Labour whip from backbench MP Dawn Butler after she appeared to share a tweet describing Kemi Badenoch as a “member of white supremacy’s black collaborator class”.

Ms Butler swiftly deleted her retweet of a post from Nigerian-British author Nels Abbey, which responded to the prospect of Ms Badenoch becoming Tory leader by describing “Badenochism” as “white supremacy in blackface”.

But she has been strongly criticised by Conservative figures, with several calling for her to lose the Labour whip.

Ben Obese-Jecty, who was elected as MP for Huntingdon in July, said Ms Butler was “not alone on the Government benches in holding this view of Kemi”.

Test

He said: “This will be a test to see whether Keir Starmer removes the whip, or effectively condones Butler’s abhorrent approval of this smear.”

But on Sunday night Labour showed no signs of removing the whip from Ms Butler.

Sir Keir has previously suspended the whip from Labour MPs in response to comments about senior black Conservative politicians.

In 2022, he suspended Rupa Huq from the party for describing then-chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng as “superficially” black. Ms Huq apologised and had the whip restored six months later.

Other Labour figures, including Sir Keir and Foreign Secretary David Lammy, hailed Ms Badenoch’s election as the first black leader of a major UK party as a historic moment.

Satirical

In later posts, Mr Abbey said his original comments had been “clearly satirical” and “intended as a sketch”, but defended Ms Butler saying she “may not welcome the ascendancy of an extremely right-wing reactionary black person”.

He added: “Because of stuff like this, which is vehement political disagreement, it is both fair and to be expected that many black people may not view Badenoch as (leader of the opposition) to be a ‘proud moment for our nation’ in the same way as, say, Keir Starmer does (or is politically mandated to).”


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Mab Meirion
Mab Meirion
11 days ago

The previous government weaponised ‘taboo’, the cunning devils…

Evan Aled Bayton
Evan Aled Bayton
11 days ago

Like the call for reparations which is fundamentally racist this too is a racist remark this time black on black. There is a serious danger that the attitude of some black politicians and spokespersons will generate right wing reactionary action. We live in the 21st Century and by now race and ethnicity should not be considerations. Sadly the conflict in the Middle East has reopened old wounds and made that old form of racism antisemitism acceptable to a lot especially on the left.

Fi yn unig
Fi yn unig
11 days ago

If the call for reparations is fundamentally racist, was the slavery that sparked these calls not racist? Dawn Butler, like Rupa Huq before but not even saying so directly, is merely supporting a statement of observable reality in that there are non white skinned members sitting in the Tory ranks, one of which is now their leader, who are working for a white supremacist organisation (irrefutable since 2019) and an explanation from any of these is not forthcoming but to her credit, Baroness Sayeeda Warsi has finally left this organisation for this very reason and has outed them for what… Read more »

Karl
Karl
11 days ago

Can’t see an issue. I sadly feel many in the Tory party have aligned with those who would previously be their enemy. Badenoch being one of the worst of them.

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