MP Dyne Abbott has been suspended by the Labor Party, which is pending an inquiry into the comments made about racism, understanding the BBC.
The step also means that Abbott will sit as an independent MP, known as a whip.
Labor said it would not comment “while this investigation is on”.
It comes after a BBC interview, where Abbott was asked about the 2023 dispute, when he was suspended as a Labor MP for a year, in which a newspaper had a comment about racism in a letter.
BBC’s James Nuti was asked if she sees the whole incident with regrets, then she said: “No, not at all.”
In that letter to The Observer newspaper, he wrote that the Irish, Jews and passengers “undoubtedly experience bias” which is “similar to racism”.
He wrote: “It is true that many types of blondes with differences of differences, such as Redheads, may experience this bias. But they are not subject to all their life racism.”
Abbott was in a hurry to withdraw the comment, which was heavily criticized by the Jews and passenger groups, and apologized “because of any pain”.
But he was suspended from the party and was re -accepted just before last year’s general election.
In the latest interview, he said: “Clearly, there should be a difference between racism that is about color and other types of racism, because you can see a passenger or Jewish person walking on the road, you don’t know.
“You don’t know that until you stop talking to them or you are in a meeting with them.
“But if you see a black person walking on the road, you look directly that they are black. They are different types of racism.”
He said: “I think it is foolish to try and claim that racism that is about skin color is similar to other types of racism.”
Abbott posted a clip of his BBC interview online after the news of his suspension emerged, only “This is my interview clip” wrote and did not respond to the requests of the comment at that time.
She later made a brief statement to BBC Newsnight, stating: “It is clear that this labor leadership wants to exclude me.
“My comments in the interview with James Nuti were factually correct, as any fair person would accept.”
Deputy Prime Minister Angela Reneer told The Guardian newspaper: “There is no place for antismitism in the Labor Party, and obviously the Labor Party has processes for this.
“Daini reflected how she puts that article together, and said ‘version was not considered’, and now to double and ‘Okay, really I didn’t mean it. I really mean what I had originally said is a real challenge.”
Former Labor Shadow Chancellor John McDonal posted on X to protect his colleague.
He said: “Before commenting or decisioning on the fate of Dyane Abbat, before people, including Labor Party spokespersons, I can actually listen to the interview of Diane on the BBC reflections, in which he unlikely condemns antisementism and discuss various forms of racism.”
In her BBC interview, Abbott was asked if she would condemn the antisementic behavior in the same way that she would behave racist against someone due to her skin color.
He replied: “Okay, and I am a little tired of those who are trying to pin antisemitic labels on me because I have spent fighting all kinds of racism throughout my life and in particularly fighting antisemitism, partly due to the nature of my constituency.”
Haikney North and Stoke Newington are the longest serving women MPs in the Commons, who entered Parliament in 1987.
She said she was “grateful” to be a Labor MP in the BBC interview, but she was sure that the party’s leadership was “trying to take me out”.
Listen to James Nuthi’s interview with Dianne Abbott BBC feels,