Huff Post, Trisher.
Long-Bailey was asked to take down her tweet and to apologise. Instead, she retweeted her original message with a clarification that she had not endorsed the entire Peake article. This was a form of words that she later claimed was agreed with the leader’s office (which is disputed). But this only caused more anger, and she was repeatedly told that Starmer wanted her to delete the message and issue a full apology.
HuffPost UK has been told Long-Bailey refused to take phone calls from the leader’s office, and after being given four hours to comply with his wishes, Starmer decided enough was enough. Having given her a way out, he felt he was left with no option but to fire her as shadow education secretary. After informing his deputy Angela Rayner, he rang Long-Bailey in person and said he was removing her from her post.
None of us know, do we. We can only go on what we read from those we trust and each of the reporters will have different sources. This was also part of the same article. I agree with the summary. This has got to stop in the LP - if only so that the worst of Israel's attacks can be called out without the conversation steering off in the anti-Semitism direction. It may be heavy handed to start with but that is because nothing was really done under the last leadership about it.
For Starmer, whose leadership campaign was launched with a zero tolerance vow on anti-semitism, the need to act was obvious. The day he defeated Long-Bailey on April 4, his first message as leader was that he would “tear this poison out by its roots”.