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Labour 'forced to stump up £2m' as party settles claims over leaked anti-Semitism dossier

Labour 'forced to stump up £2m' as party settles claims over leaked anti-Semitism dossier

Daily Mail​5 days ago
Labour has stumped up a reported £2million after settling claims brought by 20 people featured in a leaked internal document about anti-Semitism in the party.
The cases have been settled after the group of mainly ex-employees took action over alleged defamation or the unauthorised use of personal data.
According to The Guardian, the payouts will total just under £1million but with Labour paying both sides' legal fees the party's overall bill will be near to £2million.
The controversial 860-page document was produced under Jeremy Corbyn 's leadership of Labour and contained private email and WhatsApp messages.
The report claimed factional hostility towards Mr Corbyn hampered Labour's efforts to tackle anti-Semitism during his leadership.
It was originally intended to be submitted to the Equalities and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) inquiry into Labour's approach to dealing with anti-Jewish hate.
The unredacted document was leaked in April 2020, shortly after Sir Keir Starmer succeeded Mr Corbyn as Labour leader.
The settlements are said to include a payout to Labour's former elections chief Patrick Heneghan.
He was allegedly falsely accused in the dossier of having tried to sabotage Mr Corbyn's chances of winning the 2017 general election.
The document was also said to have defamed Josh Stolliday, a former director of Labour's governance and legal unit.
He reportedly took action over the leak of private messages and 'false and damaging' claims that he tried to obstruct action on anti-Semitism in order to undermine Mr Corbyn.
It is understood the claims were settled prior to last year's general election, although the details have only emerged now.
The total legal costs for Labour connected to the dossier is now estimated at more than £4million.
Court documents previously revealed Labour spent about £2.4million on its own abandoned lawsuit against five former staffers accused of leaking the internal report.
Martin Forde QC was chosen by Labour to chair an inquiry into the 'circumstances, contents and release' of the dossier in 2020.
He found that both Labour's left and right wings treated the issue of anti-Semitism as a 'factional weapon' when Mr Corbyn was leader.
A Labour spokesperson said: 'The Party welcomes the resolution of this matter.'
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He turned his hand to fiction too, with Dead on Time (2009), featuring a British prime minister, and an autobiography, Rebellious Lord (2020). He published more than 200 articles in academic journals and books, and was co-editor of the Journal of Applied Econometrics from 1984 to 1991. In British political life, he was chairman of the Islington South and Finsbury Labour party between 1986 and 1992; the constituency's MP was Chris Smith. When in 2020 Meghnad felt that the Labour party had not done enough to counter antisemitism, he became a non-affliated peer, and then, in 2023, a crossbencher. Born in what is now Varodara, in Gujarat state, Meghnad was the son of Mandakini and Jagdhishchandra Desai, a civil servant. He started secondary school at the age of seven and matriculated at 14. 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He is survived by Kishwar, his children and four grandchildren, Om, Ira, Chloe and Kiko. Meghnad Jagdishchandra Desai, Lord Desai, economist, born 10 July 1940; died 29 July 2025

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