For a quarter of a century, the parliamentary constituency of Batley and Spen has been considered a Labour stronghold.
In 2017, the Labour Party won the seat with over 55% of the vote and a majority of 8,000. In 2019, this majority was slashed to around 3,500 and at yesterday's, the seat was won with only 35% of the vote and a wafer-thin majority of 323.
The Labour Party is standing on shaky ground.
Since the 2019 General Election and the recent by-election defeat in Hartlepool, there has been considerable discussion about Labour losing support amongst white working-class voters in Britain. What has been missing from this discussion is the fact that Muslims have historically made up a significant part of Labour's traditional working-class heartlands, and support in these communities is wavering too.
Muslim voters in Batley and Spen
Muslim voters make up 20% of the constituency of Batley and Spen. Many have highlighted growing disillusionment within the Muslim community towards the Labour Party as an explanation for Labour's difficulties during the by-election campaign.
When Labour has lost support among white working-class voters, political commentators and party officials have said, rightly, that the party must do more to engage with these voters and win back their trust. And yet when it comes to the Muslim voters of Batley, it seems that same courtesy has not been extended.
Instead, Muslim voters have been smeared as bigots and anti-semites. Two weeks ago, it emerged that a senior Labour party official had the Daily Mail, which has its own of Islamophobia, that Muslims were deserting the Labour Party because Keir Starmer was tackling anti-Semitism in the party.
This attempt to smear Muslims rather than engage with them is indicative of a culture within the party that seeks to sideline the concerns of British Muslims. This has led to growing disillusionment with the Labour Party as demonstrated by the collapse in Labour's vote share.
And it's not just the Muslims of Batley that feel alienated by the Party.
In November, the Labour Muslim Network released a on Islamophobia within the Party. The report, which constituted the largest-ever consultation of Muslim members and supporters of the Labour Party, found 29% of Muslim Labour members had suffered Islamophobia within the Party while 37% had witnessed Islamophobia in the party.
44% of Muslim Labour members said Labour does not take Islamophobia seriously, with more than half of those surveyed saying they did not trust the Labour leadership to tackle Islamophobia.
These findings should have spurred the Labour leadership into action to win back the trust of Muslim Labour members and supporters. But six months on, a new commissioned by the Labour Muslim Network found that support for the Labour Party, and Keir Starmer in particularly, had fallen even further.
37% said their view of Labour had become more unfavourable in the past 12 months, as opposed to 25% whose view of the party had become more favourable, creating a net 12% drop in favourability. 22% of British Muslims had a favourable attitude towards his leadership, while 29% were unfavourable, giving the Labour leader a net favourability of -7%.
When was leader of the Labour Party, he demonstrated that the Labour Party could go much further in championing causes that many Muslims support such as the plight of the and the .
It is no coincidence that 86% of British Muslims voted for the Labour Party in 2019. Under the leadership of Keir Starmer, however, that support has started to crumble.
For years, we have been told that do not care about issues like Kashmir and Palestine, and yet it was these causes that were plastered over Labour's leaflets in Batley and Spen. Despite this last-ditch attempt to appeal to Muslim voters, many instead opted for George Galloway, the Worker's Party candidate who has been historically vocal on these issues.
Keir Starmer's unsatisfactory leadership
Labour's credibility over these issues was made worse by the actions of Keir Starmer himself, since being elected leader of the Labour Party last year.
Last year, Starmer referred to the Kashmir crisis as a "", seemingly abandoning a previous position under Corbyn, which expressed solidarity with the people of Kashmir. His remarks caused outrage amongst Kashmiri communities in traditional Labour strongholds such as Birmingham, Bradford, and Luton. More than 100 British mosques even threatened to the Labour Party over the stance.
In April, Starmer was accused of undermining Muslims by , a UK-based Palestine advocacy organisation, after pulling out of an iftar during the month of Ramadan. Starmer of the Ramadan Tent Project's virtual fast-breaking event because the CEO had supported the boycott of Israeli dates. This led to significant backlash, with over 2,000 people signing a by Friends of Al-Aqsa which criticised the opposition leader for holding Muslims to different "standards".
This position put Starmer at odds with most Labour Party members. According to a recent Yougov , 61% of Labour members supported the boycott, divestment, and sanctions (BDS) movement against Israel, while only 8% opposed it.
The recent which led to the deaths of 256 Palestinians caused outrage across the Muslim world. Many expected Starmer to take a stronger stance on this issue. Instead, it recently emerged that UK Labour officials had a discussion at a local party on sanctions against Israel, claiming the discussion could lead to "anti-Semitic behaviour".
Given these recent actions, it is no surprise that many Muslims feel alienated by the Labour Party. Many expect a stronger stance from the Labour leadership on these issues - and rightly so.
Let it not be forgotten that there was widespread disillusionment within the Muslim community towards the Labour Party prior to Corbyn. It was a Labour government that presided over the and Afghanistan War.
It was also a Labour government that introduced authoritarian legislation like the agenda which undermined the civil liberties of UK citizens, disproportionately targeting the Muslim community. It is abundantly clear that the Labour Party has a long way to go in order to win back the trust of the Muslim community.
Muslims, of course, do not only care about foreign policy issues and immigration. According to the most recent , almost half of the Muslim population resides in the 10% most deprived areas in England. Muslims also experience the lowest of any religious group in the country, earning £350 less each month than average. Like many other working-class communities, Muslims have suffered from a decade of austerity cuts to public services and been by Covid-19.
Now is the time for the Labour Party to repair its relationship with the Muslim community, not just to save their seats, but to save their integrity. That means recognising Muslims as an integral part of its working-class heartlands and actively engaging with rather than smearing the Muslim community.
Taj Ali is a freelance writer and political activist based in Luton. He recently graduated from the University of Warwick with a BA in History and Politics.
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