Junior doctor who joked on Twitter about gassing 'the Jews' and said videos calling the Holocaust a sham were 'pretty convincing' is let off with a warning
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A junior doctor, who made offensive remarks about Jewish people on social media, has avoided being removed from the medical register despite his controversial statements. His comments included joking about gassing ‘the Jews,’ describing Jewish individuals as ‘Jew banker goblins,’ and expressing belief in videos that denied the Holocaust, labeling them ‘pretty convincing.’

Dr. Martin Whyte, who previously held a position on the British Medical Association’s executive committee, faced suspension in 2023 following his series of ‘utterly vile’ tweets. Among these, he urged a boycott of Israel ‘out of spite.’

The General Medical Council (GMC) ultimately decided that although Dr. Whyte’s posts were ‘grossly offensive,’ they did not quite reach the threshold of posing a significant risk to public safety.

During the investigation, it was argued that Dr. Whyte’s remarks were not ‘intentionally antisemitic,’ and the committee concluded that his actions did not stem from a deliberate intent to harm.

Currently, Dr. Whyte is employed by Northumbria Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust as a specialist trainee in pediatrics. In light of the situation, the medical regulator issued him a formal warning.

The warning detailed that on April 18, 2018, October 27, 2018, and November 23, 2018, Dr. Whyte posted comments on Twitter (now known as X) that were deemed ‘grossly offensive.’

‘This conduct does not meet the standards required of a doctor. It risks bringing the profession into disrepute and it must not be repeated.’

Among the social media posts that brought Dr Whyte to the attention of the GMC and the BMA were jibes about the ‘decomposing carcass of the Queen’ and called Conservatives ‘b*******’, adding they should not be allowed to work as medics.

Dr Martin Whyte - who joked about gassing 'the Jews', referred to Jewish people as 'Jew banker goblins' and said videos calling the Holocaust a sham were 'pretty convincing' - has escaped being struck off by the GMCDr

Dr Martin Whyte – who joked about gassing ‘the Jews’, referred to Jewish people as ‘Jew banker goblins’ and said videos calling the Holocaust a sham were ‘pretty convincing’ – has escaped being struck off by the GMCDr 

Dr Whyte, who is currently employed by Northumbria Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust as a specialist trainee in paediatrics, has been given a formal warning by the medical regulator

Dr Whyte, who is currently employed by Northumbria Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust as a specialist trainee in paediatrics, has been given a formal warning by the medical regulator

In response to a tweet about the deadly attack on a Pittsburgh synagogue in 2018, which killed 11 and wounded six, Dr Whyte tweeted: ‘hahaha zeig heil hahaha gas the jews hahaha just kidding but have you seen these youtube videos about the holohoax the’re pretty convincing imo [in my opinion]…’.

The same year, 2018, he tweeted: ‘Me: It’s important to represent Judaism and Jewish people fairly and respectfully in art. Also me: Jew banker goblins.’ 

And a year earlier, he argued that people should boycott Israel ‘out of spite’, writing: ‘Lifehack: promise not to boycott Israel, but do it anyway. Do it out of spite.’ 

He also suggested, with zero evidence, that political journalist and Spectator publisher Andrew Neil was only on the BBC because he had killed a prostitute with Tony Hall, the then director-general of the Beeb.

Replying to Andrew Neil on Twitter, he wrote: ‘Ahaha you thin skinned babyman.

‘How are you still so prominent at the BBC? Did you and Tony Hall kill a prostitute together or something?’

After the social posts surfaced, a BMA spokesperson said the Tweets were ‘totally unacceptable’, adding that Dr Whyte had been removed from ‘any and all BMA business’.

In an email to their members in 2023, the BMA called his comments ‘totally unacceptable’ and said there was ‘absolutely no place in the BMA for anti-Semitism’.

It continued: ‘We were not aware of these comments, nor of any anti-Semitic views. Any form of antisemitism is inexcusable.

‘We strive to be a tolerant, diverse and progressive organisation. We want to assure members that we treat anti-Semitism and all forms of prejudice and discrimination with the utmost seriousness.’

Advocacy group Campaign Against Antisemitism (CAA) called the tweets ‘utterly vile’ and said the decision not to take action against Dr Whyte was ‘another spectacular failure by the medical regulator.’

A spokesperson told Daily Mail: ‘Every week there is some new outrage from the medical regulatory system. 

‘Is there any level of racism against Jewish people that the GMC would consider worthy of actual disciplinary action? If so, we have yet to see it. 

‘Antisemitism is at record highs in our society and regulators are totally asleep at the wheel. Another spectacular failure by the medical regulator.’  

During Dr Whyte’s a three-day hearing, which was held virtually in August, Colette Renton, representing the GMC, honed in on Dr Whyte’s reference to ‘Jew banker goblins’.

Minutes from the hearing show that Ms Renton argued such a term was ‘an extremely reductive stereotype’.

The notes explained: ‘It infers that members of the Jewish community are prevalent in the banking trade. ‘Goblins’ is an antisemitic slur used to stereotype the physical appearance of Jewish people or, alternatively, used to suggest that Jewish people share characteristics with fictional depictions of goblins, such as untrustworthiness or selfishness.’

Ms Renton said that Dr Whyte’s use of such language ‘connotes prejudice and hostility towards Jewish people.’

Regarding his tweet referring to ‘the holohoax’ and references to Nazi language, Ms Renton said ‘an ordinary reader would immediately recognise the language used as antisemitic.’ 

Citing a previous judgment of Mr Justice Chamberlain, she added: ‘The language or imagery of Nazism is often used as a taunt, which deliberately references and weaponises the most painful events in Jewish history’.

Ms Renton said that while it was not suggested Dr Whyte holds antisemitic views, ‘there was a real risk that an ordinary member of the public would interpret his tweets as being antisemitic.’

Both Tweets were found by the investigation committee to be antisemitic, while his social media post pertaining to Andrew Neil was ‘grossly offensive’. 

The notes state that Dr Whyte accepted that his language had been ‘offensive and inappropriate’ in regards to the tweet about Mr Neil, but he denied that he holds antisemitic views. 

A GMC spokesman said: ‘We carried out a full and thorough investigation into Dr Martin Whyte’s social media posts. After hearing the evidence, an investigation committee found his posts were grossly offensive.

Dr Rahmeh Aladwan, an NHS junior doctor who vowed she 'would never condemn' the October 7 Hamas attacks, is due to appear in front of the Medical Practitioners Tribunal Service (MPTS) to face accusations of antisemitism

Dr Rahmeh Aladwan, an NHS junior doctor who vowed she ‘would never condemn’ the October 7 Hamas attacks, is due to appear in front of the Medical Practitioners Tribunal Service (MPTS) to face accusations of antisemitism

The trauma and orthopaedics doctor, who is of British-Palestinian heritage, turned up to her most recent hearing in Manchester sporting a necklace with a gold number 7 charm

The trauma and orthopaedics doctor, who is of British-Palestinian heritage, turned up to her most recent hearing in Manchester sporting a necklace with a gold number 7 charm

‘They decided a formal warning was necessary to uphold confidence in the profession, which will appear on the doctor’s online record for two years and must be disclosed to any potential new employers.

‘A warning is a formal, significant disciplinary action on a doctor’s registration.’

A BMA spokesman said that Dr Whyte would not be allowed to return to represent the BMA ‘in any elected office again’.

A spokesperson said: ‘The BMA takes the conduct of its elected officials and staff incredibly seriously. 

‘To that end Dr Whyte was immediately removed from taking part in any and all BMA business at the time the social media material came to light, and this was followed up with our own internal investigation which made this permanent. 

‘The decision about whether he can continue to practise as a doctor is a matter for the GMC, not the BMA. 

‘However, we have taken the view that he should not be able to represent the BMA in any elected office again. We wish to reiterate that the BMA stands opposed to all forms of discrimination.” 

Health and Social Care Secretary Wes Streeting said: ‘There must be zero tolerance for antisemitism in the NHS. It’s one of the most diverse institutions in Britain, and every patients and member of staff deserves to feel safe and respected—no ifs, no buts.

‘When doctors make vile, discriminatory comments, it’s not just offensive—it’s dangerous.

‘The current regulatory system is failing Jewish patients and NHS staff, and that’s unacceptable. That’s why I’ve asked Lord Mann to lead an urgent review into antisemitism and racism in the NHS, and we’re rolling out mandatory training across the service. We will root this poison out—wherever it exists.’

The latest GMC decision comes in the wake of other medical professionals currently facing tribunal over allegations of antisemitism, including Dr Rahmeh Aladwan, an NHS junior doctor who vowed she ‘would never condemn’ the October 7 Hamas attacks.

Dr Aladwan, 31, is due to appear in front of the Medical Practitioners Tribunal Service (MPTS) to face accusations of antisemitism and creating social media posts littered with praise for terrorist organisation Hamas. 

She was cleared in September of the same allegations after the MPTS ruled her opinions on social media did not amount to ‘bullying or harassment’.

Those posts included a description of the Royal Free Hospital in Hampstead, north London, as ‘a Jewish supremacy cesspit’, Israeli people as ‘worse than Nazis’ and the Holocaust as ‘a concept’.

She has also openly called for Jihad during a protest in London, where she praised armed Palestinian fighters as ‘heroes’ and said Israel should be ‘dismantled’. 

Dr Ellen Kriesels, a consultant paediatrician at Whittington Health NHS Trust, has been referred for an Interim Orders Tribunal after making comments on 'Jewish supremacy'

Dr Ellen Kriesels, a consultant paediatrician at Whittington Health NHS Trust, has been referred for an Interim Orders Tribunal after making comments on ‘Jewish supremacy’

Dr Aladwan was also arrested just days before an MPTS hearing to determine whether the tribunal could go ahead for the second time on suspicion of inciting racial hatred and malicious communication. 

One of the charges, for which she remains on bail, relates to social media messages posted on October 7 ‘which demonstrated support for the Hamas attack on Israel’. 

The trauma and orthopaedics doctor, who is of British-Palestinian heritage, turned up to the hearing in Manchester sporting a necklace with a gold number 7 charm.

A date for her next MPTS hearing has not yet been set. 

Meanwhile, Dr Ellen Kriesels, a consultant paediatrician and clinical lead for community paediatrics at Whittington Health NHS Trust, has been referred for an Interim Orders Tribunal next week after making comments on ‘Jewish supremacy’. 

Dr Kriesels was photographed at several anti-Israel demonstrations earlier this year carrying a placard depicting an Israeli flag surrounded by the words: ‘Rape, steal, cry, kill, cheat, lie.’

Her social media posts on X also include repeated accusations that Jews are ‘supremacists’, while Judaism is a ‘racist, imperialist and genocidal religion.’

In one post dated 25 August 2025, she defended Hamas, claiming that its members are ‘oppressed resistance fighters, not terrorists.’ She also described yellow ribbons, worn in support of Israeli hostages, as ‘a visual sign of Jewish supremacy.’

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