Labour activists tonight slammed Jeremy Corbyn’s performance on the Andrew Neil show as ‘truly horrific’ as they vowed to ‘push images and stories with positive messages’ to try and deflect from the ‘awful’ appearance.
During the interview which aired this evening on the BBC, Corbyn refused to apologise to the UK Jewish community after the Chief Rabbi slammed the party for how it deals with anti-Semitism claims.
Messages which are alleged to have been sent between so-called Corbynistas attack the Labour leader’s performance on the show, before discussing how they will try and rectify it.
The messages are thought to have been leaked from a private WhatsApp or Apple group chat and start with one use saying ‘folks need to listen up for a sec’.
They then go on to state how the interview was pre-recorded, and mention his non-apology to the Chief Rabbi.
‘Jeremy has pre-recorded the Andrew Neil interview already and apparently it’s truly horrific.
Jeremy Corbyn (right) is thought to have pre recorded the interview with Andrew Neil, which was aired earlier this evening
The messages (examples above) were thought to have been sent by Labour activists who described the interview as ‘horrific’
‘Like awful. Ten minutes purely on AS. The chief rabbi ect. JC refused to apologise to the Rabbi so it’s going to be brutal’.
The same person then calls for the group to ‘flood all hashtags relating to the programme with the above’.
‘Stories with positive messages and push integrity policies’.
A source told MailOnline that the messages had not come from the Labour party.
It also urges them to ‘not attack Andrew Neil’ and also tells them to ‘ignore Brexit’, an issue which has so far divided many Labour supporters who feel the party does not have a clear message on leaving the European Union.
During the interview Corbyn also said he would support the WASPI (Women Against State Pension Inequality) women who had been ‘short changed’ by the government after the rate was changed in 2011.
However, he was unable to confirm how this would be funded.
The Labour party was unable to be reached for comment this evening.
The activists seemed to rally around their leader, wanting to make sure any bad messages from the show dismissed
The messages come as the Chief Rabbi faced a torrent of sickening abuse from Corbyn supporters today after his unprecedented condemnation of anti-Semitism under his leadership of Labour.
Ephraim Mirvis was labelled a ‘sewer rat’ after claiming that the vast majority of British Jews were ‘gripped by anxiety’ at the idea of Mr Corbyn in No 10 after the election in December.
Other critics used anti-Semitic tropes, complaining of ‘Israeli interference’ in the election after South Africa-born Mr Mirvis’s intervention.
Others accused him of being a close friend of Boris Johnson, suggesting he was speaking out for party political reasons.
He accused Mr Corbyn of allowing the ‘poison’ of anti-Semitism to take root in Labour, saying it could no longer claim to be the party of diversity, equality and anti-racism.
Ephraim Mirvis (pictured) said the vast majority of British Jews were ‘gripped by anxiety’ at the idea of Jeremy Corbyn in No 10
The Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, waded into the row today by saying the rabbi’s intervention should ‘alert us to the deep sense of insecurity and fear felt by many British Jews’
Urging voters to examine their consciences in the polling booth, he warned: ‘The very soul of our nation is at stake.’
In response one Twitter user said: ‘The Chief Rabbi is an utter disgrace. Backing the most right wing UK government ever and telling lies about the man who has opposed racism for decades.
‘A rabbi, dancing on the grave of all victims of racists, how low has he sunk. Sewer rat would be an underestimate.’
Twitter users claiming to by Corbyn supporters vented fury at the Chief Rabbi, branding him a ‘sewer rat’ and also turned their fire on Mr Welby
But current and former Labour politicians also weighed in behind Rabbi Mirvis.
Jess Philips, who is defending her Birmingham Yardley seat, said: ‘The only response to the chief Rabbi that is moral is, ‘I’m sorry and I’ll do whatever I possibly can to win back your community’s trust.’ So that’s what I will say.’
Luciana Berger, who quit Labour in protest at anti-Semitism and joined the Lib Dems, said the comments were ‘devastating’.
Former minister Ian Austin said: ‘It is unprecedented for the Chief Rabbi to have to do this.
‘It is heartbreaking to see a party so many of us joined to fight racism and which had such a proud record of fighting for equality reduced to this. Utterly shameful. A complete disgrace. Corbyn & co should be so ashamed.’
Home Secretary Priti Patel said it was ‘staggering’ that Labour would ‘lecture people about race and faith’ while the party was under investigation by the Equality and Human Rights Commission for anti-Semitism.
The Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, waded into the row today by saying the rabbi’s intervention should ‘alert us to the deep sense of insecurity and fear felt by many British Jews’.
The Chief Rabbi took aim at Mr Corbyn for supporting a racist mural and for describing terrorists who endorse the murder of Jews as ‘friends’.
Mr Welby said: ‘That the Chief Rabbi should be compelled to make such an unprecedented statement at this time ought to alert us to the deep sense of insecurity and fear felt by many British Jews.’
The warnings came as Mr Corbyn prepared to launch his party’s ‘race and faith manifesto’ this morning, which includes a plan to hold an inquiry into far-Right extremism.
It propose to teach all schoolchildren about the ‘injustice’ of the British empire.
And it accuses the Equality and Human Rights Commission watchdog – which is investigating Labour over institutional anti-Semitism – of not being ‘truly independent’.
In his attack, in an article for The Times, the Chief Rabbi wrote: ‘The way in which the leadership of the Labour Party has dealt with anti-Jewish racism is incompatible with the British values of which we are so proud – of dignity and respect for all people
The Chief Rabbi took aim at Mr Corbyn (pictured together) for supporting a racist mural and for describing terrorists who endorse the murder of Jews as ‘friends’
‘It has left many decent Labour members and parliamentarians, both Jewish and non-Jewish, ashamed.
‘What we do know from history is that what starts with the Jews, never ends with the Jews.’
Rabbi Mirvis quoted a claim from the Jewish Labour Movement that 130 cases of anti-Semitism had not been dealt with by party officials.
A Labour spokesman insisted this figure was false, adding: ‘Jeremy Corbyn is a lifelong campaigner against anti-Semitism and has made absolutely clear it has no place in our party and society and that no one who engages in it does so in his name.’ The storm came as:
Mr Corbyn has been blamed for Labour’s anti-Semitism problem because he has spent his political life fraternising with the hard Left.
Mr Corbyn prepares to launch his party’s ‘race and faith manifesto’ this morning
On one occasion in Parliament he even greeted representatives of the Islamist terror groups Hamas and Hezbollah as ‘friends’.
In 2012, Mr Corbyn offered his backing online to Los Angeles-based street artist Mear One, whose mural, featuring several known anti-Semitic tropes, was due to be removed after complaints.
Later, he was pictured holding a wreath yards from the graves of terror leaders linked to the 1972 Munich Olympics killings.
Since he became Labour leader in 2015, two female Jewish MPs have been driven out of the party by the anti-Semitic abuse they have faced and one of them even needed a bodyguard at the party conference.
Now Labour is under investigation by the Equality and Human Rights Commission over its racism problem – only the second party after the BNP to face such a probe.
Home Secretary Priti Patel said it was ‘staggering’ that Labour would ‘lecture people about race and faith’ while the party was under investigation
Two rabbis have already come out to urge voters not to back Mr Corbyn’s party.
But last night’s intervention of the Chief Rabbi of the United Hebrew Congregations of the Commonwealth, at the height of an election campaign, is utterly unprecedented.
Sajid Javid said he was ‘saddened’ by the Chief Rabbi’s comments, calling for a period of reflection in a post on Twitter.
The Chancellor wrote: ‘Very saddened to read this. To think the Chief Rabbi of a European nation has to say this about a contender for high office in 2019.
‘We should all reflect on the state of our politics.’
The Labour spokesman said the party was taking robust action to root out anti-Semitism, with swift suspensions, processes for rapid expulsions and an education programme for members.
‘Anti-Semitism complaints account for about 0.1 per cent of the Labour Party membership, while polls show anti-Semitism is more prevalent among Conservative than Labour supporters,’ he added. ‘In the past week it’s been revealed Conservative candidates said events in the Holocaust were ‘fabricated’ and called British Jews ‘extremists’.
‘A Labour government will guarantee the security of the Jewish community, defend and support the Jewish way of life, and combat rising anti-Semitism in our country and across Europe.’
Raised under apartheid, he’s seen evils of prejudice
Born in South Africa in 1956, Rabbi Mirvis said growing up under apartheid gave him an early understanding of the dangers of division and inequality.
His father Lionel, also a rabbi, preached against the apartheid system and visited political prisoners held on Robben Island, where Nelson Mandela was jailed.
His mother led the country’s only training college for black pre-school teachers.
Since his own appointment as Britain’s Chief Rabbi, he has appealed for greater unity within the Jewish community and between different faiths.
He was the first United Synagogue rabbi to host an address by a Muslim imam, and has addressed meetings at the Church of England synod.
Rabbi Mirvis’s father, also a rabbi, preached against the apartheid system and visited political prisoners held on Robben Island, where Nelson Mandela (pictured) was jailed
He has also welcomed moves to give women a greater role in Orthodox synagogues and said he wanted greater inclusion for gay Jewish people. Rabbi Mirvis took over from his predecessor Lord Sacks in 2013, when he became the 11th Chief Rabbi of the United Hebrew Congregations of the UK and the Commonwealth in its 300-year history.
One of his first acts was to tweet good wishes to his football team, Tottenham Hotspur, ahead of a London derby game with north London rivals Arsenal.
He chose not to live in the £10million grace and favour home used by Lord Sacks but moved into a six-bedroom home in Hendon, north London, with his wife Valerie, a social worker.
He was previously rabbi at the Finchley Synagogue in north London and was Ireland’s chief rabbi from 1985 to 1992, after taking on the role when he was just 28.
Rabbi Mirvis took over from his predecessor Lord Sacks (pictured) in 2013, when he became the 11th Chief Rabbi of the United Hebrew Congregations of the UK and the Commonwealth
Now 63, he and wife Valerie have four sons and seven grandchildren. Their oldest child, Liora Graham, died in 2011 after a long battle with cancer.
He has long been a vocal critic of anti-Semitism within the Labour. He accused party officials of sending ‘an unprecedented message of contempt to the Jewish community’ last year, over new guidelines for its members on how to deal with racism.
Labour’s national executive committee overrode the concerns of more than 65 senior British rabbis to wave through the new rules on anti-Semitic behaviour in its ranks, and was widely criticised for failing to do enough to tackle the problem.
By Vanessa Allen for the Daily Mail