The Mail on Sunday

Proof that woke lobby has warped our view of society

- By Georgia Edkins and Natasha Livingston­e

THE British public hugely overestima­tes the size of minorities, sparking fears ‘woke’ identity politics are warping views of society.

When 1,800 people were asked by pollster YouGov how many people were transgende­r, for instance, they thought it was about five per cent of the population.

In reality, between 0.3 per cent and 0.7 per cent identify as a different gender from their biological sex – the gap between the estimate and the reality appearing to show how the transgende­r rights debate has skewed perception­s.

While most Britons are white and heterosexu­al, the poll found many believe the UK is made up of far more racial, religious and sexual minorities than it actually is. When the survey asked what proportion of adults was white, the median answer was 65 per cent – yet the true figure is 87 per cent.

And while official figures show that black Britons make up about three per cent of the population, those questioned estimated the proportion at 20 per cent. Britons believed about 15 per cent of the population is Muslim, against the true figure of about four per cent, and they estimated the Jewish community stood at 10 per cent when it is one-twentieth that size.

The public also hugely overestima­tes the number of vegans and vegetarian­s – suggesting about 20 per cent refuse to eat animal products, when it is just four per cent.

Results of the survey, commission­ed by the Common Sense Campaign, have been used to gauge the accuracy of minority representa­tion in the media. Those surveyed were asked 16 questions to work out the overall perception of the make-up of the UK.

Tory MP Sir John Hayes said: ‘This distorted impression created by much of the broadcast and online media is so out of tune with the facts as to befuddle people about the true character of Britain. There are, of course, all sorts of minority groups that deserve our respect and regard.

‘The overwhelmi­ng majority of British people are drawn from a small number of groups. Media preoccupat­ions with minorities are skewing the facts.’

The poll revealed that the public thinks 10 per cent of people are bisexual and 15 per cent are gay or lesbian. The true figures, official statistics say, are 1.3 per cent and 1.8 per cent respective­ly.

Survey participan­ts were asked to estimate how many people earn more than £100,000. The median guess was 20 per cent. The real proportion is only three per cent.

The Common Sense Campaign said: ‘Diversity, particular­ly in the media, is evidently a positive and laudable aim. What these results show, however, is that they are playing into a misconcept­ion about Britain that under-represents some groups and over-represents others.

The country, it added, needs to be more accurately portrayed. ‘We risk going down the American route of seeing everything through the prism of identity,’ it said.

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