There was already precious little doubt that the Green Party has an alarming problem with anti-Semitism.
But today the Daily Mail reveals the full scale of the alleged Jew-hatred which seethes within the party’s ranks.
Exposed once and for all is a deeply disturbing truth: British Jews will not be safe under the Green Party.
As we set out, the party is investigating allegations of anti-Semitism by dozens of candidates who had been selected to stand in tomorrow’s local elections.
Ludicrously, the party had previously claimed that just a ‘handful’ of its people had been involved in such despicable activities and that they had all been ‘dealt with’.
The real story is very different: it has been forced to fast-track internal probes into comments made by 30 of its candidates.
Furthermore, a whistleblower places the blame squarely on the shoulders of Green leader Zack Polanski, accusing him of turning a blind eye to ‘open Jew hate and Hamas love’, even at high levels within the party.
The Greens have undergone a remarkable transformation, expanding from their former tree-hugging niche into something designed to appeal far more broadly to Left-leaning voters. But this has come at no small cost.
There was already precious little doubt that the Green Party has an alarming problem with anti-Semitism
The Corbynites who now pack out its infrastructure and its locally based groups have brought with them a toxic legacy from their past lives on the extremes of Labour.
Those who left Keir Starmer’s Labour Party – either by expulsion or desertion – have mutated into the Green Menace and are now up to their same old tricks.
But perhaps the penny is beginning to drop with the public.
Polanski’s approval rating has plummeted by 14 points, polling indicates, in the wake of his suggestion police were too heavy-handed in the arrest of the Golders Green terror suspect.
His comments were truly revealing, and provide a grave indicator of what will happen if his party makes significant wins tomorrow and soon begins to influence law and order at a local level.
Criminal justice will get softer, not tougher – the exact opposite of what Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch vowed to deliver when she spoke to the Daily Mail earlier this week.
But if the public are beginning to have second thoughts about Polanski – and set about educating him on how quickly a political leader can turn from messiah to pariah – it may still come too late for Labour.
Burdened by Starmer’s deadweight and facing annihilation at the polls, Labour has itself published a dossier of 25 Green candidates which it described as ‘vile’ for a litany of ‘harrowing anti-Semitism, dangerous conspiracy theories and appalling comments supporting Hamas’.
It is an indicator of how Labour fears an extinction event at the next General Election.
However, unless Labour implodes and is forced to go to the national polls early, there is still time for common sense to prevail.
The centre-Right must form a coherent, inspiring plan which will reset Britain’s priorities and allow the country to thrive.
But, for now, one thing is certain: the Green Party is not a solution to anything.
Rather, it is a deeply dangerous threat in its own right.



