Britain’s politics is in turmoil. The Labour government is consumed by an open leadership crisis, with the Prime Minister facing demands from more than ninety of his own MPs to resign and a likely challenge from within his own cabinet. All of this was triggered by Labour’s hammering in the local and devolved elections of May 7.Westminster is absorbed in the spectacle, and understandably so. But for British Muslim communities, the lasting significance of those elections lies elsewhere. The May vote brought a real surge in Muslim civic engagement, with initiatives like the Muslim Council of Britain’s “Get Out The Vote” campaign helping to drive registration and turnout. Yet that engagement was too often met with suspicion rather than welcome.During the campaign, too many political actors and media outlets fell back on lazy, divisive narratives about Muslims, spreading misinformation and misrepresenting how our communities actually engage politically. Commentators repeatedly raised the spectre of “family voting”, claiming that Muslims, particularly Muslim women, were pushed or directed to vote in certain ways, as though they had no agency of their own. Others spoke of “sectarian voting,” portraying Muslims as a single bloc voting on the basis of religion alone, r …