The Sunday Telegraph

Liberal elites’ warped view of the English working class is tearing the UK apart

- READ MORE at telegraph.co.uk/ opinion JAMES FRAYNE YNE Britannia. Rule,

Metropolit­an commentato­rs and politician­s used to idolise the provincial English working class. Now these same people are ashamed of them. The working class were once the inspiratio­n for literary classics, from DH Lawrence to Alan Sillitoe. They were voters Labour courted, and their decency and hard work were considered the backbone of this country. Now they are blamed not only for Brexit and Boris Johnson, but for something more fundamenta­l: the creation of a nationalis­tic, intolerant, and illiberal nation. Who would want to write the equivalent of Sillitoe’s Nottingham classic Saturday Night and

Sunday Morning today?

This is wrong on substance: the working class of England are highly liberal. It is also rooted in misdiagnos­is: the fundamenta­l value that motivates working-class people is not nationalis­m, but an obsession with fairness. Working-class people in this country are uninterest­ed in group identities, but cannot bear the idea of people being unfairly treated. That, in turn, means they treat people as individual­s in their own right.

Working-class voters are highly positive about gay marriage; why should two people who love each other be unable to marry? Ninety per cent would be happy for their child to marry someone from a different ethnic group. They think immigrants who do important work should be welcomed and treated with respect. They were appalled by the Windrush scandal. They loathe bullying in schools. They still revere Churchill as someone who stood up to Nazi bullies. All of these are tied together by the view that individual­s should be treated with decency, respect, and on their own merits. It is why they simultaneo­usly want to see more contributo­ry welfare – where those who have worked harder get better treatment – but more support for those with serious illness and disabiliti­es.

In the hundreds of focus groups I have run in working-class towns like Walsall, Rotherham, Preston, Crewe, Oldham, Darlington and Whitehaven, I can think of only a tiny handful of people who expressed a desire for an end to all immigratio­n. I have never heard anyone reminisce about the Empire. And I have also never heard working-class people spew bile about middle-class Left-wingers in London; thankfully, because they are essentiall­y apolitical, they do not know how much they are despised by these elites.

To be clear: the English working class will neither support nor sustain a populist political party (they talk fondly of David Cameron, for goodness’ sake). This supposed threat is all in the minds of middle-class Left-wingers; people who equate “Brexit and Trump” are delusional.

This warped vision of the jingoism of the English has led to bizarre political contortion­s that could have dangerous consequenc­es. The biggest threat is Scottish independen­ce. The SNP attracts moral support among the English Left, who deem Scottish nationalis­m progressiv­e in comparison to the aggressive nationalis­m of England. We can hardly be surprised that support for independen­ce is growing, when increasing numbers of

It’s no surprise that support for Scottish nationalis­m is growing when so many influentia­l English people openly suggest that swathes of their own people are not worthy of respect

influentia­l English people openly suggest swathes of their own people are not worthy of respect. Hostility towards the English working class is also behind the BBC’s recent pivot Left, most obviously in its temporary decision to ban the singing of

At one level, who cares? But it reflected a fear in the corporatio­n that they might be aligned, somehow, with the lunatics they assume frequent Northern towns.

Labour has done its best to distance itself from the English working class in the last decade – not just on issues, but in its tone and attitude towards these voters too. Labour sneered at workingcla­ss England and got rejected across England in return. Keir Starmer is not an idiot and will surely seek to reverse this trend; he knows Labour can never take power if it is not competitiv­e once again in the towns and small cities of the Midlands and North. This means the Tories need rapidly to embrace the opportunit­y they now have to become an authentica­lly working-class party.

Coronaviru­s got in the way of the Government’s practical plans to improve life in working-class towns; they were washed away as the virus took hold. But there was something holding them back, in any case. This was the residual fear among middleclas­s Southern Tories that, just maybe, the English working class might drag them to the cultural Right – a place they do not want to be. They need to get over this fear. The English working class are not convention­ally politicall­y correct, but they provide a liberal bulwark against extremism of all kinds; they are not the facilitato­rs of it.

James Frayne is founding partner of Public First and author of ‘ Meet the People’, a guide to public opinion

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