Menu
Wed, 27 November 2024

Newsletter sign-up

Subscribe now
The House Live All
By Mark White, HW Brands, Iwan Morgan and Anthony Eames
Environment
Communities
Press releases

Labour confusion as Lewisham East chair NOT suspended over Emily Thornberry Isis tweets

Emilio Casalicchio

2 min read

Labour was plunged into confusion today over claims a controversial local party chair had been suspended over comments he made about Emily Thornberry.


A party source told PoliticsHome the membership of Ian McKenzie had been put on hold over a series of tweets about Isis - only to backtrack less than three hours later.

The Lewisham East chair has also been forced to stand down from his new job as an aide to Rokhsana Fiaz, the newly-elected Labour mayor of Newham.

It comes after the former aide to Tony Blair masterminded a successful campaign in Lewisham East to win Janet Daby the Labour nomination for the forthcoming by-election in the seat.

She managed to defeat Sakina Sheikh, who had the support of Momentum, and the Unite-backed Claudia Webbe, to win the coveted candidacy.

In the wake of the result, supporters of Jeremy Corbyn shared a number of tweets Mr McKenzie made in the past.

In one, from 2016, he said: “Emily Thornberry is too old for Isis. They won't make a sex slave of her. They'll behead her and dump her in a mass grave.”

And in another he said: “Maybe she'd agree sex slavery to one man only, provided he didn't sell her on or insist on gang rape.”

 

 

It is understood the tweets were posted in the wake of comments Ms Thornberry had made about being prepared to negotiate with Isis.

A Labour source initially told PoliticsHome Mr McKenzie was suspended last night pending an investigation by the party. But the same source later said he was still a member and the party was looking into the tweets.

He said on Twitter: “A lobby source tells me that one spokesperson in @UKLabour says I’m suspended and another one says I’m not.”

 

 

Mr McKenzie has long been a hate figure for left-wing activists in Lewisham after organising to keep pro-Corbyn group Momentum out of the constituency party structures. 

A Labour spokesperson said: “The Labour Party takes all complaints of abuse and discrimination extremely seriously.

“Any complaints are fully investigated and any appropriate disciplinary action taken in line with our rules and procedures”

PoliticsHome Newsletters

PoliticsHome provides the most comprehensive coverage of UK politics anywhere on the web, offering high quality original reporting and analysis: Subscribe

Categories

Political parties