Labour names head of leaked report investigation
- Published
Labour's ruling body has appointed barrister Martin Forde QC to lead an investigation into the leaking of a report into the party's handling of anti-Semitism allegations.
The dossier claimed anti-Jeremy Corbyn sentiment among Labour staff hindered efforts to tackle the issue.
But others say the report was leaked in an attempt to "smear whistleblowers".
The National Executive Committee agreed Mr Forde would head up the probe, with the support of three Labour peers.
But BBC political correspondent Iain Watson said there had been arguments within Labour's ruling body over the names of those chosen.
He said concerns had been raised at the lack of Jewish and Muslim representation on the panel while some on the left of the party had objected to Labour peer Baroness Willcox, the former leader of Newport City Council, because she had been a prominent support of Sir Keir Starmer's leadership bid.
And prominent left-wing members of the NEC, such as Momentum's Jon Lansman, questioned Baroness Wilcox's impartiality.
Mr Lansman said she had tweeted or retweeted what he described as 'factional' anti-Corbyn statements.
As the leaked report partly focussed on alleged anti-Corbyn activity at the party's HQ, he argued that her inclusion on the panel was inappropriate.
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Sir Keir, who was elected leader last month, promised a "swift" independent inquiry into the contents of the report and how it was leaked after it became public over the Easter weekend.
Last week, the NEC agreed to conclude its investigation and to publish a report by mid-July, and reiterated the deadline after Friday's meeting.
Mr Forde is currently acting as the independent adviser on the Windrush Compensation Scheme.
He will be supported in his probe by former Labour Party General Secretary and opposition whip, Lord Whitty, and fellow peer Baroness Lister, as well as Baroness Willcox.
A spokesman for the NEC said the three peers had "expertise in the law and the Labour Party's structures".
But Iain Watson said one member of the NEC had criticised the choice of Baroness Willcox as a "stitch-up" while an impromptu attempt to get Lord Dubs, the child refugee campaigner who escaped Nazi-occupied Czechoslovakia as a child, onto the panel had been narrowly defeated.
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'Litany of mistakes'
The leaked report was drawn up in March - before Mr Corbyn stepped down as leader.
The 860-page document is understood to be a draft drawn up to help inform the party's responses to an investigation by the Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) into anti-Semitism within Labour.
The report said there had been "a litany of mistakes, deficiencies, and missed opportunities" to tackle the issue, and "rigorous and far-reaching reforms" had not been made soon enough.
But it also included allegations that some party staff had tried to undermine Mr Corbyn's leadership ahead of the 2017 election, along with WhatsApp messages from named individuals, appearing to make derogatory comments about Mr Corbyn, party policy and the membership.
The names were not redacted when the document was leaked to the media. Many of those named in the report no longer work for the party and some are considering suing for breach of confidentiality.
But Momentum, the pressure group which backed Mr Corbyn throughout his leadership, said anyone who had brought the party into disrepute should be suspended pending the outcome of the investigation.
And it said those who compiled the leaked report deserved full legal protection.
"The brave whistleblowers who compiled the redacted report and exposed the allegations must not be persecuted," a spokesman for Momentum said.
"Labour members have slogged their guts out for the party and deserve to know what went on at the top."
A spokesman said the investigation would look into "the circumstances, contents and release of an internal report".
Labour said officials were working with the Information Commissioner's Office over the leak and insisted it took its responsibility on data protection "extremely seriously".