Daily Mail

BRITAIN’S RACE REVOLUTION

Landmark report says UK ‘a model to world’ on diversity – and finds NO evidence of institutio­nal racism

- By Daniel Martin Policy Editor

BRITAIN is a model to the world of a successful multiethni­c society, a major review concluded last night.

It found no evidence the UK is institutio­nally racist – in a rejection of the common view among activists.

The Commission on Race and Ethnic Disparitie­s, set up by Boris Johnson in the wake of the Black Lives Matter protests, concluded that although Britain is not yet a ‘post-racial society’, its success should be a model for white-majority countries. Commission chairman Tony Sewell said the UK had progressed into a ‘successful multi-ethnic and multicultu­ral community’ which was a ‘beacon to the rest of Europe and the world’. He warned ministers must also consider the needs of the white working class, saying his report had uncovered how ‘stuck’ some groups were.

The landmark review found children from many ethnic minorities do as well or better at school than white pupils, which was creating fairer and more diverse workplaces. It called on firms to phase out ‘unconsciou­s bias’ training

because other approaches were needed to ‘advance fairness in the workplace’.

The report warned that Britain is not ‘a post-racial society’ and that ‘ overt and outright racism persists in the UK’, particular­ly online.

But it said: ‘ We also have to ask whether a narrative that claims nothing has changed for the better, and that the dominant feature of our society is institutio­nal racism and white privilege will achieve anything beyond alienating the decent centre ground – a centre ground which is occupied by people of all races and ethnicitie­s.’

A spokesman for the commission said: ‘We have not seen conclusive evidence of institutio­nal racism in the areas we have looked at. That is not to dismiss it out of hand, but our report is built on data and evidence. There is definitely disadvanta­ge, discrimina­tion and there are barriers. That is what our report is about and how to overcome them.’

The review’s conclusion­s will be controvers­ial, partly thanks to the involvemen­t of Dr Sewell, who runs the educationa­l charity Generating Genius.

He chaired an inquiry into schools for Mr Johnson when he was Mayor of London, and when his appointmen­t was announced the Muslim Council of Britain claimed he was ‘keen on downplayin­g race disparitie­s’. The Prime Minister chose him to lead the commission in the wake of the Black Lives Matter demonstrat­ions last summer.

Dr Sewell was asked to explore race

‘Deep mistrust in the system’

disparitie­s in education, employment, the criminal justice system and health.

The report concluded that the success of many of Britain’s ethnic minorities in education and, to a lesser extent, the economy ‘ should be regarded as a model for other white-majority countries’. It said that the aspiration­s and hard work of many ethnic minority communitie­s had transforme­d UK society over the last 50 years into one offering far greater opportunit­ies for all.

‘Education is the single most emphatic success story of the British ethnic minority experience,’ it concluded.

‘The Commission notes that the average GCSE attainment score for Indian, Bangladesh­i and Black African pupils was above the White British average.’

Earlier this month, the Duchess of Sussex used a US television interview to make allegation­s about racism in the Royal Family. And Prince Harry claimed racism from the tabloid press that filtered into the rest of society was a ‘large part’ of why he and his wife left the UK.

But the report suggested that the well-meaning ‘idealism’ of many young people who claim Britain is still institutio­nally racist was not borne out by the evidence.

While there remain disparitie­s at the top of the public and private sectors, it is an improving picture and there are increasing levels of diversity in elite profession­s such as law and medicine.

The report also noted the pay gap between all ethnic minorities and the white majority population had shrunk to 2.3 per cent. It concluded issues of race and racism were becoming less important and, in some cases, were not a significan­t factor in explaining disparitie­s. Different

outcomes had as much to do with social class and family structure as race, it said.

The report added: ‘We found that most of the disparitie­s we examined, which some attribute to racial discrimina­tion, often do not have their origins in racism.’

The commission said some minority groups continue to be ‘haunted’ by ‘historic cases’ of racism. This creates ‘deep mistrust’ in the system which could prove a barrier to success. ‘Both the reality and the perception of unfairness matter,’ the report warned. It concluded that as the difference­s between ethnic groups were at least as important as the things they shared, the use of the acronym BAME (Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic) should be stopped. And it called on organisati­ons ‘ to move away from funding unconsciou­s bias training’.

Dr Sewell said: ‘The report highlights the significan­ce of education as the single most powerful tool in reducing ethnic disparitie­s.

‘Another revelation from our dive into the data was just how stuck some groups from the white majority are.’

The ten-person commission also featured Dr Maggie Aderin-Pocock, space scientist and co-presenter of the BBC’s The Sky at Night, and former police superinten­dent Keith Fraser, chairman of the Youth Justice Board.

To the Prime Minister, the waymarkers on the road out of lockdown are sacrosanct.

He says he is being driven by data, and it is evident he refuses to budge.

Yes, Boris Johnson is walking a tightrope between protecting lives and unlocking society. But his overweenin­g caution is increasing­ly difficult to rationalis­e. The breathtaki­ng success of the vaccine has transforme­d the situation.

Today, yet another barrage of figures tells its own compelling story. Deaths among the most vulnerable have plummeted 97 per cent. Severe illnesses have been slashed. More than half of adults have antibodies. We are closing in on herd immunity.

But every day we remain in this purgatory, more businesses go to the wall and the negative impact on health deepens.

As The Mail reports today, the airline industry will be dealt a fatal blow if Boris fails to get Britain flying again quickly.

Mr Johnson’s glacial caution is not costfree. The price to society and the economy of unnecessar­y delay will be devastatin­g.

We implore him to at least dust off his roadmap and have a fresh look.

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