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Mr Wheeler'Exactly what is your point David?  You quote remarks all of us can read and hear from BBC, Sky, Guardian etc and make our own mind up on.  Tell us what you think.Why not discuss the Jewish MP barred from a Bristol primary school by a teaching union and Palestine Solidarity'.While we wait for Mr Ainsworth to get his brain in gear and his artificial intelligence fired up in order to answer you, here is some interesting commentary on the situation from today's Spectator on-line."Ruth Wisse defines anti-Semitism and anti-Zionism as ‘the organisation of politics against the Jews’, and in Britain it is striking just how openly the organisers operate. During his remarks to Sunday’s Jewish Labour Movement conference, Communities Secretary Steve Reed revealed that a Jewish colleague was ‘banned’ from visiting a school in his constituency ‘in case his presence inflames the teachers’. Reed described this as ‘an absolute outrage’.Peruse the social media output of politicians and commentators otherwise agitated about threats to democracy and the targeting of MPs. I suspect they’ll be rather more muted about this episodeThe Jewish News reports that the politician in question is the Jewish MP Damien Egan and alleges that members of the National Education Union and the Palestine Solidarity Campaign were behind the effort to block the Bristol North East MP. The newspaper points to social media posts from pro-Palestine activists which allegedly celebrated Egan being rejected for a constituency visit last September. The posts reference Egan’s involvement in Labour Friends of Israel.Without commenting on the Jewish News allegations, I will make a few points. If a Jewish MP has been refused permission to visit a local school because of his policy positions, it is an escalation of the new political order under which Britain is governed. If teachers have been involved in organising this exclusion, it confirms an activist trend in education and the public sector more broadly. If outside groups have taken part in this campaign to subject MPs to ideological vetting, it implies coordination to frustrate the work of a democratically elected politician.Members of Parliament visit their constituency schools, talk with staff and pupils, and typically pose for photographs for the local paper. This is a well-established civic tradition in our country.MPs do not electioneer or make political speeches and headteachers welcome them regardless of party or ideology.At least that’s how we did things under the old order, and teachers and parents understood why school visits had to be open to MPs of all parties. They might have approved of this MP and disapproved of that. They might have regarded the visits as pointless and a waste of time, but they persevered. Observing the customs and processes of representative democracy, however grudgingly, is an innately British instinct.Keep an eye on this one. It’ll go nowhere, of course, but take note of who talks about it and who doesn’t. ('Messrs Ainsworth, Brigo, Carter ?') - JH. Peruse the social media output of politicians and commentators otherwise agitated about threats to democracy and the targeting of MPs. I suspect they’ll be rather more muted about this episode. It raises too many awkward questions, I reckon.So let’s raise those questions. Why would teachers or anyone else be inflamed by a visit from a Jewish MP who seldom speaks about the Middle East and speaks in achingly moderate terms when he does? And if they were inflamed, why could they not recognise that a job often comes with unwanted duties, and put on a professional face? Who exactly was involved in this anti-democratic conspiracy and were they representatives of any bodies or organisations? What does the local authority and central government intend to do about this? And if they are not prepared to confront and eliminate this problem, does it follow that others with different political views may do the same?Britain’s new political order and the instincts and ideologies that underpin it are irreconcilable with this country’s traditions, customs and norms. This is not how we do things here, and if we want to keep it that way, the state must crack down mercilessly on this would-be successor regime and its foot-soldiers. Jewish MPs should not require the permission of activists or extremists to go about their constituency duties. Any campaign that says otherwise must be smashed promptly and beyond recovery.

John Hawkes ● 25d

Mr AinsworthYour quotes from the Telegraph are the usual selective sniping regarding Reform and Conservative politicians but forget to mention Zahawi's background.Always negative and never positive.'Asked about his 2015 comments about Mr Farage today, Mr Zahawi told a reporter: 'Good on you for digging out a tweet from 11 years ago.'But all I would say to you is if I thought this man sitting next to me in any way had an issue with people of my colour or my background who have come to this country, who have integrated, assimilated, proud of this country, worked hard for this country, paid millions of pounds in taxes in this country, invested in this country, I wouldn't be sitting next to him. And I don't think he would be sitting next to me either.'Mr Zahawi arrived in Britain in the 1970s as a Kurdish refugee fleeing Saddam Hussein's brutal regime in Iraq.He has previously described how, aged 11, he sat at the back of a classroom in the UK 'unable to speak a word of English'.But he went on to make a fortune founding polling firm YouGov from an office in his garden shed, as well as building a £100million property portfolio.His political career saw him first enter Parliament as a Tory MP in 2010 before becoming Chancellor little more than 12 years later.'You just cannot stand immigrants that come to this country, don't continually bang on about being discriminated against, assimilate into its culture and way of life and make a major contribution to its success.

John Hawkes ● 25d