Peter Oborne writes:
George Galloway, a 61-year-old, six-times-elected politician was beaten up for
three minutes by a brutal and determined assailant in broad daylight, and was
admitted to hospital as a result.
There are grounds for assuming
that the motive was political, and the assault occurred due to Galloway’s
criticism of Israeli actions in the Middle East.
The assailant was reportedly
shouting comparing Galloway to Hitler, and shouting about the Holocaust.
There is something very
disturbing about the response to this event by the mainstream British political
establishment.
Mr Galloway has received no public message of sympathy from a
single MP from any party – nothing from Speaker Bercow, from the Prime
Minister, or from any of the other elected political leader.
I know that Mr Galloway is a very
controversial figure and that many people, for honourable reasons, disagree
very strongly with his views.
Yet that is irrelevant. The attack on Mr Galloway
is beyond doubt an attack on British democracy itself.
It is a basic principle of our
political culture that men and women must be able to speak up for the causes
they believe in without threats or violent reappraisal.
This attack on Mr
Galloway comes just days after the Labour MP Jim Murphy was forced to abandon
campaigning in Scotland for the No campaign.
He cited intimidation and was
advised by police to end his campaign.
Had an MP been attacked by some
pro-Palestinian fanatic for his support of Israel, I guess there would have
been a national outcry and rightly so.
Why then the silence from the mainstream
establishment following this latest outrageous assault on a British politician?
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