Among other things, Labor's manifesto includes proposals for a new gender equality unit in the UK's Ministry of Finance that examines how economic proposals affect ethnic minority groups.

A new authority will review the country's colonial heritage and ensure that the elementary school teaches students in historical injustices as a result of the British Empire, writes The Guardian. The party also wants to review how topics such as racism, anti-Semitism, Islamophobia and the history of blacks are taught.

According to party leader Jeremy Corbyn, the manifesto reflects Labor's strong will to fight the injustices and discrimination faced by many minority groups in the UK.

Criticism of anti-Semitism within the party

At the same time as the manifesto is launched, Labor receives stinging criticism from the Jewish community. In The Times, Britain's chief rabbi Ephraim Mirvis attacks Labour and Jeremy Corbyn, who is believed to have let anti-Semitism take root in the party.

"The way Labor has handled racism against Jews is incompatible with the British values ​​that we are so proud of - that all people should be treated with dignity and respect," Mirvis writes in a chronicle.

The rabbi accuses the party leader of having anti-Semitic views and further says that British Jews are worried about what might happen if Labor wins the upcoming parliamentary election on December 12.

Earlier this year, a group of Labor members appeared in a BBC review describing their experiences of how the party failed in its handling of allegations of anti-Semitism within the party.