Does Britain have a national emergency of acrimonious language on its hands? The Speaker of the House of Commons thinks so. He has summoned party leaders today to blunt their furious barbs. This time last year, a gunman targeted an African-American church in Kentucky in a hate crime; another gunman, shouting anti-SemiticShowing hatred or prejudice towards Jewish people. insults, killed 11 people at a Jewish synagogue in Pittsburgh, and a third man mailed 14 pipe bombs to Democratic ex-presidents, members of Congress and other critics of Donald Trump. After this spate of violence, many Americans wondered whether Trump's hostile political rhetoric - attacking "globalists", minorities, the media and Democratic "mobs"- contributed to the attacks. Democrats accused him of direct incitement. Today, there are fears of something similar happening in Britain. Last week, Boris Johnson inflamed the House of Commons by dubbing the Benn Act, which is supposed to force him to delay Brexit, the "Surrender Act" - rather as if Brexit were a re-run of World War Two. When the MP Paula Sherriff referred to her colleague Jo Cox, murdered by a right-wing extremist in 2016, as she pleaded with the Prime Minister to refrain from using words such as "surrender", he abruptly dismissed her concerns as "humbug". Yesterday, it emerged that West Yorkshire Police are investigating three serious threats against Sherriff in the wake of this exchange. "People are parroting his words in the emails we are getting," she says. "You voted for the Surrender Act, they say. People are so angry - and the fact that we have a Prime Minister who is deliberately stoking up this toxic atmosphere is beyond irresponsible." On the Remain side, the leader of the Liberal Democrats had just spent three days of her party political conference using the slogan: "Bollocks to Brexit". Words such as "charlatanA person who falsely aims to have a certain skill or knowledge. It was first used in English in the 17th Century to describe someone who sells fake medicines, and descends from an Italian verb meaning to babble. ", "liar", "hard-right", "fascist", "Nazi" and "thug" are regularly used to describe Johnson. Anyone witnessing the debate in Parliament last Tuesday, when MPs were recalled after the suspension, could not fail to be struck by the vitriol and anger of the debate. John Bercow, who as Speaker is in charge of behaviour in Parliament, is so worried that he has demanded an emergency meeting of party leaders later today. A number of MPs, including former Tory minister Amber Rudd, have accused Johnson of legitimising violence against opponents. Meanwhile, his key adviser said the term "surrender" would be used repeatedly throughout any election campaign. Dominic CummingsCummings, a former chief adviser to Boris Johnson, was himself widely condemned for breaking lockdown restrictions in 2020. told a meeting on Friday he planned to "ram it down their throats". Does Britain have a national emergency of acrimonious language on its hands?n The dark side "What nonsense!" say some. One of the glories of British democracy is robust vocabulary. The country that gave us "blood, toil, tears and sweat" - that gave us "we shall fight on the beaches, we shall fight on the landing grounds, we shall fight in the fields and in the streets" (Winston Churchill) - cannot possibly now ban the military metaphor and censor the use of the word "surrender", or the fine 18th century insult, "humbug". But there is a massive difference between passionate debate and the cynical use of focus-group-tested phrases to whip up anger and division, say others. The poison and intolerance that has infected our national political debate has to be cut out. If we cannot find a way to restore some respect and responsibility to our politics, the implications will be serious - not just for those in and around Westminster - but for all of us. Look at what has happened in the USA. Keywordsanti-Semitic - Showing hatred or prejudice towards Jewish people.
Does Britain have a national emergency of acrimonious language on its hands? The Speaker of the House of Commons thinks so. He has summoned party leaders today to blunt their furious barbs.
The dark side
Keywords
anti-Semitic - Showing hatred or prejudice towards Jewish people.
Charlatan - A person who falsely aims to have a certain skill or knowledge. It was first used in English in the 17th Century to describe someone who sells fake medicines, and descends from an Italian verb meaning to babble.
Dominic Cummings - Cummings, a former chief adviser to Boris Johnson, was himself widely condemned for breaking lockdown restrictions in 2020.
Fears of violence as war of words boils over
Glossary
anti-Semitic - Showing hatred or prejudice towards Jewish people.
Charlatan - A person who falsely aims to have a certain skill or knowledge. It was first used in English in the 17th Century to describe someone who sells fake medicines, and descends from an Italian verb meaning to babble.
Dominic Cummings - Cummings, a former chief adviser to Boris Johnson, was himself widely condemned for breaking lockdown restrictions in 2020.