Difference between revisions of "Sam Matthews"
(Referencing) |
(Non-disclosure agreement) |
||
Line 13: | Line 13: | ||
==Signed off sick== | ==Signed off sick== | ||
− | Sam Matthews was "signed off sick" two months after [[Jennie Formby]] became Labour's General Secretary, and considered committing suicide by jumping from Jennie Formby's office balcony. | + | According to the [[BBC]]'s ''Panorama'' programme “Is Labour Anti-Semitic?” broadcast on 10 July 2019, Sam Matthews was "signed off sick" two months after [[Jennie Formby]] became Labour's General Secretary, and considered committing suicide by jumping from Jennie Formby's office balcony. In the ''Panorama'' programme, Matthews said that the suggestion by [https://twitter.com/lotocomms LOTO's] [[Seumas Milne]] of a “review” into how [[antisemitism]] cases were being handled was “the leader’s office requesting to be involved directly in the disciplinary process”.<ref>''[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F7eEQMyzLeo "Is Labour Anti-Semitic? - BBC Panorama"]''</ref> |
− | |||
− | In | ||
Matthews said: | Matthews said: | ||
Line 21: | Line 19: | ||
In a statement the [[Labour Party]] accused ''Panorama'' of "deliberate and malicious representations designed to mislead the public" and accused some of the ex-staff members who spoke to the programme of being "disaffected former officials" who have "always opposed [[Jeremy Corbyn]]'s leadership, worked to actively undermine it and have both personal and political axes to grind."<ref>''[https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/politics/labour-bid-stop-broadcast-damning-17806036 "Labour bid to stop broadcast of damning BBC documentary on anti-Semitism"]''</ref> | In a statement the [[Labour Party]] accused ''Panorama'' of "deliberate and malicious representations designed to mislead the public" and accused some of the ex-staff members who spoke to the programme of being "disaffected former officials" who have "always opposed [[Jeremy Corbyn]]'s leadership, worked to actively undermine it and have both personal and political axes to grind."<ref>''[https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/politics/labour-bid-stop-broadcast-damning-17806036 "Labour bid to stop broadcast of damning BBC documentary on anti-Semitism"]''</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Non-disclosure agreement== | ||
+ | The ''Panorama'' programme also aired allegations by Sam Matthews regarding numerous complaints about [[anti-Semitic]] members that he said were not acted on quickly enough. | ||
+ | |||
+ | However, the ''Morning Star'' reported that Matthews' job was terminated just months after Corbyn ally [[Jennie Formby]] succeeded [[Iain McNicol]] as Labour’s General Secretary in Spring 2018, when Ms Formby reorganised the disputes unit to make it more efficient. It led to Matthews leaving his post in July 2018, when he signed a legally binding non-disclosure agreement with the party. He is now accused by Labour’s lawyers of breaching that deal and leaking private “email exchanges” he had with colleagues. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Labour deputy leader [[Tom Watson]] has criticised his own party for taking legal action but Shadow International Trade Secretary [[Barry Gardiner]] said it was important to stop former staff from leaking information in a “partisan way for political purposes.” | ||
+ | |||
+ | The emails leaked by Sam Matthews were quoted selectively by right-wing media outlets to accuse [[Jeremy Corbyn]]’s supporters of interfering with the party’s complaints process. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Other leaked emails from the unit appear to show that it was Matthews himself who failed to handle complaints of [[anti-semitism]]. Matthews was sent evidence, a year before he left his post, of a Labour council candidate posting [[anti-semitic]] material and issued a “notice of investigation” but did not suspend the member. Matthews received more evidence months later indicating that the same member had posted an article on ''[[Facebook]]'' claiming that the [[Holocaust]] was a hoax. Matthews once again decided against a suspension. | ||
+ | |||
+ | It was only on 22 March 2018, just days after [[Jennie Formby]] was elected as General Secretary, that Sam Matthews and his unit agreed to the member’s suspension. He finally acted after concerns were raised by [[Laura Murray]], a Corbyn aide, who wrote exasperatedly: | ||
+ | :“Should he not be suspended pending investigation?”<ref>''[https://morningstaronline.co.uk/article/b/labour-takes-action-against-rogue-staffer-smearing-corbyn-ahead-of-panorama-expose "Labour takes action against rogue staffer smearing Corbyn ahead of Panorama ‘expose’"]''</ref> | ||
==Trial by email== | ==Trial by email== |
Revision as of 15:31, 11 July 2019
Sam Matthews | ||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Disaffected former official with an axe to grind | ||||||||||||
|
Sam Matthews is the Labour Party's former Head of Disputes, Governance and Legal Unit (2016 to 2018).
Contents
Signed off sick
According to the BBC's Panorama programme “Is Labour Anti-Semitic?” broadcast on 10 July 2019, Sam Matthews was "signed off sick" two months after Jennie Formby became Labour's General Secretary, and considered committing suicide by jumping from Jennie Formby's office balcony. In the Panorama programme, Matthews said that the suggestion by LOTO's Seumas Milne of a “review” into how antisemitism cases were being handled was “the leader’s office requesting to be involved directly in the disciplinary process”.[1]
Matthews said:
- “This is not a helpful suggestion, it is an instruction.”[2]
In a statement the Labour Party accused Panorama of "deliberate and malicious representations designed to mislead the public" and accused some of the ex-staff members who spoke to the programme of being "disaffected former officials" who have "always opposed Jeremy Corbyn's leadership, worked to actively undermine it and have both personal and political axes to grind."[3]
Non-disclosure agreement
The Panorama programme also aired allegations by Sam Matthews regarding numerous complaints about anti-Semitic members that he said were not acted on quickly enough.
However, the Morning Star reported that Matthews' job was terminated just months after Corbyn ally Jennie Formby succeeded Iain McNicol as Labour’s General Secretary in Spring 2018, when Ms Formby reorganised the disputes unit to make it more efficient. It led to Matthews leaving his post in July 2018, when he signed a legally binding non-disclosure agreement with the party. He is now accused by Labour’s lawyers of breaching that deal and leaking private “email exchanges” he had with colleagues.
Labour deputy leader Tom Watson has criticised his own party for taking legal action but Shadow International Trade Secretary Barry Gardiner said it was important to stop former staff from leaking information in a “partisan way for political purposes.”
The emails leaked by Sam Matthews were quoted selectively by right-wing media outlets to accuse Jeremy Corbyn’s supporters of interfering with the party’s complaints process.
Other leaked emails from the unit appear to show that it was Matthews himself who failed to handle complaints of anti-semitism. Matthews was sent evidence, a year before he left his post, of a Labour council candidate posting anti-semitic material and issued a “notice of investigation” but did not suspend the member. Matthews received more evidence months later indicating that the same member had posted an article on Facebook claiming that the Holocaust was a hoax. Matthews once again decided against a suspension.
It was only on 22 March 2018, just days after Jennie Formby was elected as General Secretary, that Sam Matthews and his unit agreed to the member’s suspension. He finally acted after concerns were raised by Laura Murray, a Corbyn aide, who wrote exasperatedly:
- “Should he not be suspended pending investigation?”[4]
Trial by email
On 10 April 2017, Patrick Haseldine sent the following email to Sam Matthews:[5]
- Dear Sam Matthews,
- Governance & Legal Unit, Labour Party
- Thank you for today's email saying that I'm expelled from the Labour Party because you reckon I've been actively promoting George Galloway, through multiple posts on Facebook and Twitter, who is standing against an official Labour Party candidate, and which is incompatible with membership of the Labour Party.
- My posts on Twitter and Facebook up to 21 March 2017 were simply reporting the fact that George Galloway was planning to stand against the NEC-imposed all-Asian shortlist at Manchester Gorton. It was not until 22 March 2017 that Afzal Khan MEP was selected as the official Labour candidate.
- Incidentally, could you please explain why Keith Vaz MP is still on Labour's National Executive Committee and is still a Labour MP after all that disgusting activity with rentboys?
- My Facebook posts and Tweets on 26 March 2017 "The Good (George Galloway), The Bad (Jess Phillips MP) and The Ugly (Tom Watson MP)" were a carefully constructed critique and straightforward observation, and should not be construed as any sort of criticism of the official Labour candidate Afzal Khan.
- I now await Iain McNicol's abject apology for this latest slur on my character, and for his completely unjustified suspension of my Labour Party membership two months ago.
- Yours comradely (but getting a bit annoyed),
- Patrick Haseldine
- Labour candidate in the 2017 Frinton by-election
Autoexpulsion
On 13 April 2017, Sam Matthews autoexpelled Patrick Haseldine:
- From : legal_queries@labour.org.uk
- Date : 13/04/2017 - 08:58 (GMTDT)
- To : patrick.haseldine@btinternet.com
- Cc : iain_mcnicol@labour.org.uk
- Subject : RE: Information regarding your Labour Party membership status
- Dear Mr Haseldine,
- Thank you for your email confirming that Facebook account referenced on pages 2-10 of our letter of the 10th of April is yours, thereby confirming the validity of the evidence used.
- As our letter stated, you actively promoted campaign posts from George Galloway on a number of public social media forums. This is demonstrable support for a candidate standing against an official Labour candidate. In doing so, you made yourself ineligible for membership of the Labour Party in line with the rules set out in chapter 2.I.4.
- The earliest time that the Labour Party will consider your application for membership is the 10th April 2022. We will not be responding further on this matter.
- Regards
- Sam Matthews
- Head of Disputes
- Governance and Legal Unit
- The Labour Party
- Southside, 105 Victoria Street, London, SW1E 6QT
Ironic cancellation
Patrick Haseldine commented:
"The irony about my expulsion is that the 2017 Manchester Gorton by-election – scheduled for 4 May 2017 – was cancelled because a UK General Election was called for 8 June 2017."[6]
Related Documents
Title | Type | Publication date | Author(s) | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
Document:BBC Panorama Investigation Into Labour Antisemitism Omitted Key Evidence and Parts of Labour’s Response | Article | 22 July 2020 | Justin Schlosberg | The fact that the Labour Party is now settling libel cases brought by both John Ware and the Labour 'whistleblowers' is remarkable, not least because there is meant to be an ongoing internal inquiry into the leaked internal report, whose findings have now effectively been prejudged. But I’ve been told this will cost the party close to half a million in damages and costs. |
Document:How top Labour officials plotted to bring down Jeremy Corbyn | Article | 16 April 2020 | Jonathan Cook | The stench of cover-up is already in the air. Keir Starmer's Labour needs to come clean and admit that its most senior officials defrauded hundreds of thousands of party members, and millions more supporters, who voted for a fairer, kinder Britain. |
Document:Labour ‘gagging orders’ put in place by McNicol – and gave hundreds of £1000s to allies | Article | 16 July 2019 | Shadow Cabinet learns ‘non-disclosure agreements’ on disaffected ex-staff appearing on Panorama and talking to media were authorised by former General Secretary Iain McNicol – and enriched staff (considered to be his anti-Corbyn allies) by hundreds of thousands of pounds | |
Document:Starmer’s Mortal Wound On The Soul Of The Labour Party | blog post | 30 October 2020 | Rachael Swindon | Starmer clearly believes he has now firmly established his own political identity and laid the foundations for the transformation of Labour’s electoral prospects – in the mould of Kinnock and Blair. It may be that he has simply destroyed his reputation for moral and intellectual integrity – and inflicted a mortal wound on the soul of his party. |
Document:That Leaked Labour Party Report | blog post | 20 April 2020 | Craig Murray | That Leaked Labour Party Report proves conclusively that Sam Matthews’ allegations of unwarranted interference from Corbyn’s office to block anti-semitism action are malicious lies. |
File:Labour internal antisemitism report.pdf | report | March 2020 | Labour Party | An enormous (851 pages) report of an internal UK Labour Party investigation into alleged antisemitism in the Party between 2014 and 2019. |
References
- ↑ "Is Labour Anti-Semitic? - BBC Panorama"
- ↑ "Jeremy Corbyn's team repeatedly intervened in antisemitism cases, claim Labour whistleblowers in new documentary"
- ↑ "Labour bid to stop broadcast of damning BBC documentary on anti-Semitism"
- ↑ "Labour takes action against rogue staffer smearing Corbyn ahead of Panorama ‘expose’"
- ↑ "BANNED BY McNICOL UNTIL 10 APRIL 2022"
- ↑ "Manchester Gorton by-election cancelled because of general election"