It is 26 years since a British MP was murdered. Back in 1990, the victim was Ian Gow, a Conservative politician, murdered by the IRA. In those days, we had come to half-expect such terrible events to punctuate the rhythm of life in the UK.
But it was from an enemy we knew and recognised – and with whom we have since made our peace. Today’s enemy is different. It is diffuse and complex. It is fuelled by hatred and by extremism of various kinds. It is both global and local.
Coming in a week of other awful events – most notably the terrorist attack on the LGBT community in Orlando – this news still affected me deeply. As I looked at my twitter feed, my inbox, my messages I realised that many other people felt the same way.
PM Malcolm Turnbull passed on Australia’s “condolences, prayers and solidarity” to the UK and Jo Cox’s family. A DFAT colleague emailed to say: “What a horrible act of senseless violence…We all need leaders like Jo who are willing to get in there and help where help is really needed”. And a close Sydney friend messaged to say, simply: “Waking to awful news out of UK. Thinking of you.”
So thank you to everyone in Australia who is joining us on a dark day for the UK, to mourn the passing of a bright star. Your sense of shared grief and solidarity means a lot at this time.
If we can take one thing from this tragedy, let that be a fresh determination to fight extremism in all its forms – or, as her husband put it: “to fight against the hate that killed Jo”.
And to say and say again to ourselves and to our kids:
Love Wins, because it must.