"Due to Brexit uncertainty, Great Britain is in great confusion. The possibility that Corbyn will become the next British prime minister cannot be ruled out. That would be a first for post-war Western Europe: a democratically elected leader of a major country who has called representatives of the genocidal terrorist movements Hezbollah and Hamas his 'brothers' and 'friends.' Corbyn has also made donations to a Holocaust denier and welcomed another. He is a long-term anti-Israel inciter and a part-time classic antisemite.
Labour accepted the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance definition of antisemitism in September 2018. Corbyn's hate-mongering reactions against Israel are thus often antisemitic acts according to the party's own definition of it. Recently, it has also become known that Corbyn signed the 2002 Cairo Declaration, which stated that Israel robbed the Palestinians of their land and accused the US of providing "unlimited support to the Zionist perpetrators of genocidal crimes against the Palestinian people." Yet polls show that while approval of Conservative leader Boris Johnson are higher in almost all sections of British society, Corbyn is seen as more favorable among the country's 18-24 age group...
A detailed document by Labour member and scholar Alan Johnson shows why Labour currently is an institutionally antisemitic party. A recent poll found that most members of the party are in denial about its antisemitism. Only 23% of those surveyed agreed that the party has a 'serious' antisemitism problem. Thirty-seven percent blamed the antisemitism on accusations from 'political opponents who want to undermine Jeremy Corbyn.' Another 17% blamed 'the mainstream media.'..."