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LONDON – Former London Mayor Ken Livingstone resigned from Britain’s Labour Party on Monday, two years after he was suspended over allegations of anti-Semitism — an issue that continues to roil the left-of-centre party.
Livingstone said in a statement that he is not anti-Semitic, but was quitting because the long-running accusations had become a “distraction.”
Livingstone was once one of Britain’s most powerful Labour politicians. He ran the Greater London Council, the city’s since-abolished governing body, during the 1980s and served two terms as the British capital’s mayor between 2000 and 2008.
But the party suspended him in 2016 after Livingstone said in a BBC interview that Adolf Hitler had supported Zionism during the 1930s.
In a statement about his party resignation, Livingstone said “I abhor anti-Semitism.” But he acknowledged that “the way I made a historical argument has caused offence and upset in the Jewish community. I am truly sorry for that.”
Allegations of Labour anti-Semitism have grown since socialist Jeremy Corbyn was elected the party’s leader in 2015. Some in the party allege that Corbyn, a longtime critic of Israel’s treatment of Palestinians, has allowed abuse to go unchecked.
Corbyn, a longtime ally of the former mayor, said Livingstone’s resignation was sad, but “the right thing to do.”
Labour is deeply divided over whether enough is being done to combat anti-Jewish prejudice in its ranks. Some Labour members saw Livingstone’s continued presence in the party as a sign the answer was no.
Lawmaker Ruth Smeeth, who has pressed Corbyn to do more, tweeted: “Good riddance Ken.”
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