A man convicted of making a racist death threat against Labour frontbencher David Lammy is a former Tory candidate for Leeds Council, it has been revealed, prompting Lammy to say the Conservative Party had “serious questions” to answer.
The Yorkshire Post reported on Friday that the perpetrator, Glenn Broadbent, had stood for election to the council on 12 occasions over the past 40 years. Last month, Broadbent, 62, was given a 12-month prison sentence, suspended for 12 months, and fined £2,000 after he admitted at Leeds Magistrates Court posting a “menacing” and “grossly offensive” message on social media.
The Tottenham MP said it was “truly despicable” that a Tory candidate had made the racist comments, and that the disclosure of Broadbent’s association raised wider questions for the party.
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“It’s truly despicable that a 12-time Conservative candidate sent me a racist death threat,” the MP said in a statement posted on Twitter. “I will never be silenced by abuse, but this raises serious questions for the Conservatives about the prevalence of anti-Black racism in their party.”
In response a Conservative Party spokesman said: “Mr Broadbent is no longer a member of the Conservative Party. We utterly deplore these comments.”
In a statement to The Yorkshire Post, Broadbent, of Greenside Road, Leeds, said he had resigned from the party last month in advance of the court case. He said he was “deeply ashamed” of his behaviour and the distress he had caused to Mr Lammy.
The newspaper said public records show Broadbent stood for election on 12 occasions between 1983 and 2008. However, he was never successful.
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