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It’s time to call out the Tories as institutionally Islamophobic

It is utterly astonishing, absurd, and callous how after assuming power, Boris Johnson has washed his hands clean of his promise, on live television, to hold an inquiry into Islamophobia into the Conservative Party. It was just earlier this year that the Conservative Party quietly reinstated 15 councillors who were initially suspended for Islamophobic rhetoric, only weeks following the ghastly Christchurch attacks.

You would have thought that in the weeks following the this atrocity where 50 Muslims were killed on their holy day in the sanctuary of their place of worship, that Britain would toughen their stance on Islamophobic activity. Yet in a week where hate crimes against Muslims increased by 593%, the Tory Party have chosen to accept back into the folds of their party the likes of candidates who branded Asians as dogs and Saudi Arabians as “sand peasants”.

Just remember this was the party who branded Labour as “institutionally racist”. The Chairman of the Conservatives, James Cleverly, “deeply” denied that there was a case of Islamophobia within the Conservative party as well. However, I feel that this example was only the latest of many anti-Muslim scourges by the Conservatives. It’s a problem that has historically permeated through the Tories from both the frontline politicians and from behind the scenes as well.

Yet the Tories time and time again decide to smear this cancerous issue with gold paint, not realising that one day it will implode and we will be left cleaning up the mess. So I feel I can’t be an active bystander for too much longer. It’s time to call out the Tories being institutionally Islamophobic.

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In my opinion for something to be institutionally Islamophobic, three signs must be identified to be actively occurring. Firstly, Islamophobia should exist openly on a large scale. Secondly, toxicity against Islam must also exist on a smaller level, for example, the use of vile words against Muslims or the treatment of Muslims in the Tory Party. Finally, Islamophobia is truly institutionalised when it’s covered up and constantly skirted around. We will dissect events which portray all three of these elements within this article.

Let’s start with Zac Goldsmith’s “disgusting” campaign strategies during the 2016 Mayoral Elections. Remember, he accused Sadiq Khan of being a “closet extremist” and someone who would “increase our risks of suffering terrorism.” This dog-whistling nature of hate was quickly forgotten about after Sadiq gained a landslide victory.

Yet however momentous Sadiq’s victory was, it certainly did not grant Zac a pardon for his hate-fledgling campaign which also saw the circulation of posters to the Hindu community claiming that Sadiq would raise the Jewellery Tax. This again was an attempt to stir the religious divide to detract votes from the Muslim Mayor. What was more astonishing was the Prime Minister, David Cameron, and other Cabinet Ministers such as Michael Fallon chose to defend Goldsmith rather than call him out, a sign of institutional Islamophobia.

Yet whilst the Mayoral elections were a macro-cosmic highlighting of Tory Islamophobia, let’s look at some events on a microcosmic level. Baroness Sayeda Warsi has countless of times called out the likes of Michael Gove who “radicalised” David Cameron’s perception of Islam, leading to him calling Muslim women “traditionally submissive.” Furthermore, Warsi also complained about the fact that she was told off for “writing too many notes” at Cabinet meetings. This was yet another attempt by some Tory MPs to unleash anti-Islamic sentiments in a subtle way, for when you don’t like something, you will find any way possible to talk ill about it.

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More recently we find Boris Johnson comparing Muslim women who wear the niqab to “letterboxes.” You would never find the Tories speaking ill against any other religious symbol, however, we find again that this issue was swept under the carpet as some sort of retribution towards Muslims for Islamist terrorism. After this incident and the incident this week, the Tories are still refusing to agree on a definition for Islamophobia within their party.

The problem with this is that anti-Muslim bigotry then becomes normalised. It is absorbed by people and it becomes acceptable to criticise Muslims in a way that no other member of any other religion is branded. The problem from the top permeates to people on a grassroots level, causing the Islamophobic treacle to seep down the echelons of the party. This week we see from The Guardian that Tory members have been found to have called Muslims “cavemen” and “sex offenders.”

Yet what exacerbates the normality of Islamophobia is that the Tories are trying to cover it up. How many times have we heard Sajid Javid say “there can’t be Islamophobia within the Tory Party if the Home Secretary is a Muslim?” Well, that’s simply not the case, as anti-Semitism was still prevalent in the Labour Party when Jewish Ed Milliband was its leader. The deliberate and devious attempt to cover up this vice further normalises the spread of Islamophobic rhetoric. This furthers the confirmation of the bias against Muslims that some Tory members might harbour, and this in itself furthers the institutional levels of racism.

Jacinda Ardern epitomised the characteristics of strong and influential leadership when she banned all military-style semi-automatic weapons in response to the terrible atrocity of Christchurch. In a similar manner, we have now evidently seen the need for the Tories to step up their game and sort out the anti-Muslim rhetoric which is being tolerated in their party. Otherwise, the Trojan horse may open sooner than we think and the consequences of Islamophobia being normalised and institutionalised will hurt the whole country. It’s time the Tories take action to rid this vile form of hate from the echelons of their party.

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