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Ed Miliband: Mensch or unmensch? (image: Department of Energy, South Africa)

For the first time in five decades, I shall not be voting Labour. I have always been a socialist and I believe in the principles of socialism. I have stood on the hustings beside Neil Kinnock and canvassed for my Aunt Rita in her constituency in Hull. I was, somewhat blurrily, a Blair luvvie and I used my dislike of Mrs Thatcher to fuel some deadly impersonations of her. My late husband, Jack Rosenthal, canvassed for Sydney Silverman in the 1945 General Election. "In them days," said the father in his seminal television play Bar Mitzvah Boy, "they handed you your Labour Party membership just after your circumcision. They gave with one hand and took away with the other.''

I still believe that, until the Iraq debacle, Tony Blair did great work to restore the party's fortunes. I still thumb through Tony Benn's diaries with a fond smile and I am Alan Johnson's number one fan as a politician, a writer and a humane human being. I have all the time in the world for Margaret Beckett and still admire Frank Field. I rather liked David Miliband and have a sneaking suspicion he may return strengthened by his time out in the real world. But this lot? The Chuka Harman Burnham Hunt Balls brigade? I can't, in all seriousness, go into a booth and put my mark on any one of them.

Ed Miliband's leadership coup was as biblical as anything in the book of Genesis, although the unions probably had less sway in those days. He comes from a family of secular Jews but his need for union approval is much greater than his need for Jewish support. We make up less than one per cent of the population, so why should he care if we vote for him or not? At a recent gathering he asked me if I was a practising Jew. I told him I was constantly practising and seldom achieving, but I did my best. "Do you do Shabbat dinners?" he asked. "Yes, when I can," I told him. "Would you like to come?" He expressed enthusiasm to learn more about his religion of his birth. We parted with a promise to ring each other's people. Two days later he was all over the papers, knocking back a bacon sandwich.

Now there is nothing intrinsically wrong with a secular Jew chomping on a thinly sliced, pan-fried pig rump — my late husband, before we were married, had been known to queue up for such a thing from the catering van on an early morning film shoot. That was fine with me. His choice. I just couldn't kiss him. Wouldn't or couldn't or both. Fair choice, I thought: treif or wife?

There is a story about a rabbi who longed to try a pig's head — just couldn't get the thought out of his own head. One day he had cause to travel many miles away and he decided to sneak under nightfall into a small, out of the way restaurant, famous for its pig's heads. The head was delivered steaming to his table, replete with an apple in its mouth. As the rabbi was about to take a large bite out of the pig, the doors opened and in walked one of his congregation. He turned to the incomer and yelled: "Can you believe this farshtinkener place? You ask for an apple and this is how they serve it!"

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Anonymous
October 30th, 2014
12:10 PM
Thank you Maureen for standing up for us. We need people like you who can make a difference in having their voice heard. My vote will be to another party.

londonbloke
October 30th, 2014
11:10 AM
Sorry Maureen but I thought that lots of people did condemn the actions of our Government regarding the war in Iraq, including a million people on the anti-war march. Why's it wrong if they condemn Israel for the same thing?

Observer of the Scene
October 30th, 2014
9:10 AM
Welcome to vibrant tribal Britain, Ms Lipman. I'd suggest that if you didn't want Labour pandering to Muslims, you should have opposed mass immigration from Muslim nations. Because rumour has it that Muslim nations tend to have a fair few Muslims in them. Still, look on the bright side: Muslim immigration has certainly transformed stale pale cities like Rotherham, Rochdale and Oxford.

Steve Specterman
October 30th, 2014
9:10 AM
The day I noted that 80 out of all the Labour MP`s were pro Palestinian. I knew then that I could never vote for them.

Paul K
October 30th, 2014
8:10 AM
Thank you for standing up for sanity, Maureen. There are unfortunately too many who just keep their heads now under the pretense of political correctness. I truly appreciate you making yourself heard - and in such an eloquent way.

Herbert
October 30th, 2014
7:10 AM
'I have always been a socialist...' And everything in the article goes on to contradict this. Laughable.

Anonymous
October 30th, 2014
1:10 AM
So you're basically refusing to support Labour because Ed Miliband won't suck up to the Israeli government like his predecessors? And your attempt to equate criticism of the Israeli government's illegal occupation of Palestinian territories with anti-Semitism is deplorable.

Toothlight
October 29th, 2014
11:10 PM
Spot on, Maureen. Ed, scared of not getting the Muslim vote, hangs out Israel to dry, just like that slimy Gerald Kaufman.We should be worried about the USA with a President who claims, on French TV, his country is now Muslim and its citizens need to be educated about Islam.

Anonymous
October 29th, 2014
11:10 PM
There are some very nasty comments on here, and I'm sorry that some people find it necessary to do that, Maureen.

John Quinlan
October 29th, 2014
9:10 PM
If you are not a Liberal by 18 you have no heart, if you are not a Conservative by 40, you have no brain. What took you so long Maureen?

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