Many working-class people believed – and continue to believe – that Brexit will bring about a positive change in their circumstances. Lisa Mckenzie (Middlesex University) argues that their voices have been ignored for 40 years, and the better-off mock and dismiss their attachment to leaving the EU. It is time to recognise the systematic way the working class has been excluded from British society.
We are two and half years away from the referendum, and only a few weeks from the date we are due to leave the European Union. Parliament and the country are at odds: the only thing that unites any part of public opinion is that our political system is not working for anyone. Admittedly, I am enjoying the irony. The Conservatives came to power almost ten years ago with the narrative that Britain was broken – and what they really meant was that they intended to set their sights on the poorest in our society. They would make Britain work by cutting public services, axing thousands of secure jobs, while encouraging the ‘Uber-job’, and the ‘Amazon-serf’. George Osborne’s speech in 2012 at the Conservative party conference, where he spoke of his dislike of those hiding behind closed blinds claiming benefits, was a sign of things to come. Then came his plan to bring people together as ‘one nation’ and of course his friend David Cameron:
“an outstanding Prime Minister of judgement and integrity. But more than that, he is leading a government of change; of profound, long-lasting change.”
How depressing that now seems as chaos ensues in Parliament, the political system is at breaking point and rage is infectious. The only positive is that Brexit has at last broken the political and social hegemony that kept our population subdued and somewhat apathetic. They are no longer apathetic, and their rage has become unbearable to the Westminster political and media chattering classes. They simply do not know what to do with this rage: they are used to being left in peace as they cause havoc in people’s lives. Now they are being challenged on what they do, and what they say.
The personal is always political when you are working class. I speak from a personal and a professional position as a working-class woman. I am heavily involved in political protest: I am an anarchist, so I put my cards on the table. I lost faith and tolerance in our current political system a long time ago. Seeing my family and my community crushed during the miners’ strike through state violence, and then purposefully devalued and denied ever since by both Conservative and Labour governments, will do that to a teenager.
Now, as a working-class academic, I mix and connect with people from all social strata. This is very different from my early life in the mining community. I never really understood, until the 1984 strike, the levels of class hatred and class prejudice in Britain. My family and community had cushioned me from those prejudices, which have always been deeply woven into British society. When the strike was over and we had lost, I realised very quickly that the working class in industrial communities were quickly deemed ‘backward’ and stupid, and it was they who were held responsible for holding the country back. The Conservatives created this narrative, but it was the Labour party that embraced it, and cultured it into the rhetoric of social exclusion. It was the working class that were excluding themselves from an otherwise modern, cosmopolitan and prosperous Britain through their ‘inferior culture’: there was no place for those that could not, or would not, emerge into New Labour’s vision of a third way utopia. My PhD mapped this New Labour-Third Way exclusion of Britain’s working class.
I finished it in 2009 as the New Labour project was on its last legs. My research within working class communities has spanned governments led by Blair, Brown, Cameron and Clegg, Cameron, and now May. As an ethnographer I have collected, analysed and disseminated the stories of British working class life for many years. Despite the change of government, for working-class people life has been a constant struggle for recognition, respect, dignity and value.
Since the referendum in 2016, I have been involved in academic, political and popular debates and arguments about why in some parts of the country working class people voted to leave the EU. I wrote a post for this site a year ago outlining how working class people had read, understood and heard the debates around the EU as exclusive, and elite, too often using language that diminished their own life experiences: ‘stupidity and racism’ has been the most common.
In parts of the country, especially those communities that have suffered badly from deindustrialisation, they have heard the voices coming out of the major cities that told them they are irrelevant to the ‘important issues’. HS2, the Channel Tunnel, and London’s Crossrail move meticulously around their communities, never stopping, moving the financially mobile around the country and into Europe, while their local buses and services are stripped back to almost nothing. Tony Blair had done the same to them 20 years earlier. Blair’s championing of mobility – meaning leaving your community, family, and history behind – reduced people’s families and backgrounds to no more than ‘class baggage’. Earlier still, Norman Tebbit and the Thatcher government had told people to get on their bikes and look for work once their traditional forms of employment had been sent abroad to maximise profit for shareholders.
I have written and argued in academic journals, and on panels at academic conferences, that for some working class people in the UK – those who had experienced political, economic and social exclusion – the question they saw on the ballot paper was not about leaving or remaining in the European Union, but was ‘Do you want things to stay the same, or do you want things to be different?’ Those people – whom the media has since named ‘the left behind’ – answered. They wanted things to change, they wanted things to be different.
Since then it seems that the whole country have fallen off the Tower of Babel and we have hit every single window ledge and corner on the way down, no one speaking or understanding anyone else. This organised perplexity has focused mostly on the class divides that have always been deep and painful in British society. I have argued in other places – based on research, and on analysis of working class narratives, social theory, and applying sociological concepts to those narratives – that working class people over the last 40 years have been purposefully excluded from British society. I have attempted to hold to account those who have willfully exploited and excluded working class people in the UK, to such an extent that their exploitation is barely recognised in any political or social discourse – apart from being victims of austerity, or votes waiting to be mobilised.
All political parties and hues are to blame for this. When the Labour party used the loyal votes of Britain’s industrial working class to parachute in political and cultural elites, it had devastating effects on working class people’s political and cultural exclusion. So did the banking crisis and the ensuing cruel Conservative party austerity policies.
Yet these facts are seen as irrelevant and petty by those who are now desperately trying to overturn the referendum result. Westminster, the media, and the academic world – all of which are solid bourgeois spaces devoid of working class people – are in full agreement: the past 40 years of deindustrialisation and aggressive policies of social mobility that marginalise working class life, pride and identity have no credence in the debate about the EU. The Green party, which was once seen by many as quite socially progressive, is now campaigning extremely hard to ignore those working class voices that asked for change, and instead overturn a referendum. The masks are slipping, and they are ugly. Things could have been so different.
There could have been recognition of the years of devastation that parts of the country have suffered. There could have been some empathy for the people that have been purposefully left out. Instead there has been an ugliness that comes with the entitlement of always being right. There is a desperation among working class people, and they do not want to be pushed back into the world before 2016 as the unheard, the unseen, and the devalued. They believe that through Brexit their social, political and economic exclusion might improve. Who can blame them? When a list of demands by the Brexit Yellow Jackets was being shared and ridiculed on social media because of its confusion and poor grammar, there was no empathy or even acknowledgment that a poorly-educated working class in a wealthy society is a shame upon us all, and is a failure of a system not an individual. For every public sector worker, academic, journalist, and politician that shared those demands with the intention of shaming those that had written it: you are the reason we have Brexit. Brexit has let those rational, liberal masks slip, and you are ugly.
This post represents the views of the author and not those of the Brexit blog, nor the LSE.
Dr Lisa Mckenzie is a Lecturer in Sociological Practice at Middlesex University.
The British working class have not been sidelined by the EU. The EU has continued to invest in infrastructure in parts of the UK which were long abandoned by Westminster. Voting for Brexit has been found to be correlated with the identity of Englishness. There are plenty of communities in Scotland who have much worse deprivation than Leave voting consituences in England yet every part of Scotland voted Remain. Brexit is very much a phenomenon of Englsh nationalism with degrees if racism and xenophobia in some. It is sad that communities in England feel excluded or left behind. But encouraging them to continue to blame the EU when there is no truth in this belief will not help them. Brexit will destroy jobs and opportunities in the areas which need them most. What will it do to these communities when they leave the EU and their lives get worse rather than better? And why would a middle class who value EU membership and have been deprived of it have any sympathy for them. And then there will be the splits within families and communities between Leavers and Remainers when factories close. Brexit has already caused an increase in racist incidents and Police are bracing for a flare up when the UK actually leaves. There is nothing to praise in Brexit. It may have some of it’s causes in inequality and deprivation but it is an additional problem which will make these things worse.
It is sad that communities faal excluded………James Greet, Communities have been excluded, and it seems thay more than half the voters in the UK feel that membership of te EU has not been good for tham.
English nationalism………It would be nice if this phrase had not become a vieled insult. When I am in England I like to be English and I am proud of that. When I’;m in Scotland I am looking fo my kiltbut at least the Scots are represented in their own parliament and have theirv own first minister. The English do not and so I think Brexit is more about the fact tha parts of England have not been represented by London obsessed Governments. Our two hard working Conservative MPs who have been lobbying for the reopening of Manston Airport were ignored by the Dpt for Transport because of their love fro Mrs Gloag of Stagecoach who wants to make money from housing London overspill.on the airport land..This will do nothing for the Local economy here in Thanet. So far , the houses being built for this overspill is of a is very poor ugly standard.
I find it a perfectly rasonable to leave the EU because the Department of Transport does not reopen Manston Airport.
Michael Lyions. I think you well know that i was trying to explain that there is a disconect between London and many parts of the UK. I think you know i was saying that there is a connection between London centric Government both Left and Right,selling out many parts of the UK EU to interests..Like fishingfor instance. I think if you balance the economy.In this respect, It would not hurt for the Government to concentrate on good cheap transport links for all parts of the Uk so that local economies are no longer left out..
I’d like to say a bit about Manston Airport which has been a long Saga. There is a DCO in progress so that the airport return for aviation after a long 4 year fight. The problem has been that as a member of the EU it has not been necessary for our Governments to bother too much about local economies or their transport connections.as much of the UKs wealth is made in London..It was thought OK to give a bit of money to prop up the so called left behind places. It’s like giving a beggar some money partly becaise of the guilt.about making a man a beggar in the first place.What the airport will bring is business. After all Thanet will have a newly reopened Port at Ramsgate..and we do have a good fastroad system except the one from Manston to Dover which is narrow and winding.Nigel farage bacjked the airport in order to win in Thanet which he did not. We have no problem with immigrants here on spite of what the press likes to say, so he would not have won the election on That tack
Do please explain to me why English nationalism = bad and Nationalism of all 3 other devolved regions (Wales, Scotland, NI) = good? Do you seriously think the Scots, Welsh or Northern Irish are any better/civilised/less racist than the English?
Sounds like nothing more than a cheap shot taken at people you disagree with and with total lack of cognition of your own hypocrisy.
QED.
Mrs’ Mckensie’s blog and this comment tell the same truth: The referendum pro Brexit has nothing to do with negative impacts of the EU but with bad british politics of the last decades.
However, if it is inevitable, how to manage it? The main hurdle is the border between the two Irelands. The UK is the important trade partner of Ireland, so the EU must protect its member nation. The UK is not so dependant on Ireland but must keep peace and wealth of the people in Northern Ireland. The solution is a special arrangement between Ireland and northern Ireland concerning all homemade goods.
Could that to arrange really be so difficult?
I’m from very poor working class stock. I know what it is like to go to school without a breakfast and I know what it is like to only have second hand clothes and live hand to mouth. I’m sorry but people who voted Brexit in northern areas voted Brexit because they were left behind by ten years of Tory rule and rather than open their brains to that fell for every bit of crap spun to them about Europe about Johnny foreigner being to blame. Sorry but the working class in this country are easily manipulated and historically always have been. The Tory’s love it and it angers me how they fall for right wing bull shit time and time again. I used to be so proud of this country but no longer. I’m embarrassed to call myself English and before so get thebusual sad well fuck on to another country no I won’t.
Includes some very worthwhile points but can one be so sure that it hinges on being ‘working-class’?
Well working class people only really refer to specific type working class person in UK politics at the moment; white, male, CISHET, blue collar and middle-aged ( or older). Working class people who are young, women, BME people, in clerical work etc don’t enter into the equation.
Considering you’re commenting on an article by a woman in a white-collar job, that’s a pretty absurd thing to say… but even if it wasn’t, are you really fine with people being treated like poop because they don’t fit into exactly the right “oppressed minority”?
Neoliberalism and Blairism have also done a lot of damage to (among others) people with disabilities (benefit cuts, mental health cuts, criminalisation of mental health issues/minor nuisance), single mothers, unemployed people, homeless people, prisoners, and undocumented migrants. They set up the conditions which caused the big collapse in living standards after the 2008 crash and the election of Cameron.
Issues like redistribution, welfare state, taxing the rich, unemployment, and the police-state affect everyone, and the worse-off disproportionately. It might be the rustbelt who are turning to right-wing populism but there’s reasons other people aren’t rallying to defend the “centre”. In America, Trump won more white women’s votes than Clinton did. Clinton leeched about three million black votes compared to Obama. A good third of most ethnic groups voted leave – and a majority of Sikhs and women.
This kind of neoliberal idpol hubris is exactly what is pushing people into the arms of the right-wing. Face facts: Blairism excluded large swathes of the population, dismantled the few remnants of social democracy, and now the repressed is returning to bite its bum.
your article is spot on. I come from a working class background and voted leave. I feel that we are now controlled by banks and big business and elites who use politicians as puppets to get what they want usually by exploiting the average person. The biggest betrayal was by Tony Blair as we all believed in him. Young people are brainwashed at universities by the same liberal ideologies and true freedom of speech is curtailed and we are derided if we dare to disagree and deemed stupid. I want brexit because I want change and not the status quo and if labour could embrace this now it would be great. Get rid of all the blairite duds.
Nancy Gunn, Very well said., I could not agree more
You do realise the Tory Right is very keen on Brexit? Rees Mogg, Johnson, Redwood, these aren’t champions of the working class.
William Francis. Lots of prople voted Brexit who were not the Tory Right. The Brexit issue is not a party issue which is part of the problem.
Nancy Gunn
I could not agree with you more.
Brexit is a protest vote against our own government and austerity and lack of investment and any sort of care in areas other than London and the South East. Will leaving the EU and the safety net it provides n terms of money for deprived communities and the real economic costs to the country change any of that? Instead of raging against the EU how about turning the rage to where it belongs, our government
Spot on Erika. There are many working class people who habitually vote tory – I know some of them. Voting against your own interests in this fashion and then protesting about being excluded makes no sense. Neither does voting to leave the EU as a protest. The alternative is to be a satellite of the warmongering, right wing US. If cutting off your own nose to spite your face is stupid, then many working class people are, in fact, stupid.
The eulogy of rage and anger, congratulations! The fact that it can be rationalised, doesn’t make it any better. But you are an anarchist, so …
Let’s face it: the problem is that people are truly “stupid” and “racist” – and not only that, they are also arrogant and selfish and I could go on and on. This is part of human nature and cannot be fixed by any reasonably high amount of public investment, within a reasonably short period of time. Moreover, who said that Brexit is a class issue?
People need to take responsibility for their choices: in the real world there isn’t a magic wand that rescues everyone. In this context, Brexit is proving itself as a cathartic moment that, in the end, through the sacrifice of ‘few’ will save many people worldwide. It will be studied in history books and will teach us a lot. It’s amazing, I think the world will thank Britain for Brexit.
Who are you calling stupid and racist, I voted leave and my IQ is around 162(it changes with every test I do).
I hate bigotry and bigots of every stripe I would even admit that the idea of numerous country working together towards a common goal is a fine idea, however the actual workings of the EU and their elitist attitude and protectionist mandate shows that the EU is not the way to manage this.
Stop shouting and screaming at leavers with claims of idiocy and racism and perhaps just for a moment actually listen to what they are saying without letting your preconceived opinions of Brexiteers blind and deafen you to their message because this attitude will only make Brexiteers more determined to destroy a system which holds them and the ones they love in contempt.
Especially when you consider that millions of our ancestors fought and died to preserve democracy, a democracy which remainders are happy to ride roughshod over when they don’t get the result they want.
Ask yourself with honesty if remain had won the referendum would remainders even give the idea of a second referendum any serious consideration?
Also remember all the other times when EU countries have voted against EU wishes and forced through more elections until they get the result they want and suddenly no more votes that really really sounds like democracy to me.
NOT…..
In fact as a student preparing for my final exam for my history degree I would say with profound confidence that the EU reminds me of the Roman Republic in its final century, when its unwieldy undemocratic and oligarchic senior council (which is unelected) forces member states to obey its rules with no thought of those nations individual problems as in the case of Greece.
As a leave voter I can confirm that even a “thick northerner” like me could understand the subtle nuances of a question which stated “do you want to stay in the European Union or do you want to leave the European Union?”
We do less than ten per cent of our trade with the EU but the fear mongers are trying to convince us we will run out of basic commodities and medicines immediately – absolute drivel, we managed to keep the UK fed and supplied throughout the blockades of World War Two, why can we not achieve this in peacetime with our EU “friends”?
Then the next part of fear mongering – “jobs, housing, pay and living standards will all suffer” – but if you are working class you are already suffering – ten Years of boom, five Years of bust, one million people being forced to use food banks, not because they are not keen on what is on offer at Waitrose or because the Marks and Spencers delivery vehicle is caught in traffic but because in the 21st century the fifth largest economy on the planet does not provide sufficient money to stop its own people starving!
We have the largest housing crisis in modern history, mass unemployment due to economic migration and any comment or protest is immediately branded as racist or xenophobic.
White English males from a working class background are being marginalised in every area and are treated as unwelcome visitors in our own country.
The truth is very simple but very well obscured – the rich liberal elite in the UK did not want to leave the cosy little gravy train of EU membership and refuse to accept that the “stupid uninformed racist little poor people” voted out of this oppressive destructive dictatorship and the elite are so arrogant they will do anything possible to deny the will of the people.
EU membership has been a disaster for the poor of the UK and as we voted in the early seventies for a trade deal and no more, were given assurances at the time that was all it would ever be to then witness the undemocratic power grab exercised by the EC and the EU – untrustworthy devious deceitful liars and bullies.
Leaving is the only sane option, with either a free trade deal which is what we originally signed up for or no deal and trade on WTO terms.
I believe there is nothing to fear and this presents a fantastic opportunity for the British people but am deeply worried the privileged greedy self serving elite will do everything they can (with clear and treacherous political support from politicians and political parties who do not serve the will of the people but their own greedy narcissistic self serving ends) to ignore democracy and the will of the people and try to stop us from leaving.
On October 31 we will be free but I fear this will be stolen from us – we the people need to make sure that democracy is observed.
n 2018, UK exports to the EU were £289 billion (46% of all UK exports). UK imports from the EU were £345 billion (54% of all UK imports).
https://researchbriefings.parliament.uk/ResearchBriefing/Summary/CBP-7851
All the points you have made in the article have got nothing to do with the EU, these are internal UK political issues, thus I reject your assertion that you cannot blame the ‘working class’ (who ever they might be), you can blame them for not been better informed, questioning the lies peddled to them. Remember they hold the power in a vote every +- 4 years, if are totally unhappy, vote the Greens in for something totally different.
Brilliant piece.
I am working class, brought up in a council estate.
Now a managing Director of a multimillion pound company.
I hate the assertion from Gerard above that the plebs did not know what we voted for.
Yes we did, there are many businessmen and professionals who voted leave.
Gerard are you seriously saying that remainers didn’t tell any fibs?
What your really saying is you don’t accept democracy because it doesn’t suit you.
That’s Ugly!!!?
I love this kind hearted lady Lisa Mkensie. She writes with a passion I understand. This understanding came to me with a stab of pain when I went to see my grandmother’s northern seaside town which was once proud as towns in Yorkshire.are.Her house had lost it’s homely heart and was divided into cubicles Her street a slum owned by Buy to let.. The sunken Italian Gardens of the town which were a refuge from the fierce winds of the North Sea,had gone with the help of EU money so that the cash strapped council did not have to pay the garderners. Even in the late 70s when Britain was at it’s most desperate the town kept up it’s neat proud appearence. It had long lost it’s railway, but it was the fishing which collapsed it’s economy , and it seems that our London Governments from all sides saw fit to sell out the fishing industry to Bordeaux and Spain for a reason I would love someone to tell me about unless of course it remains in some secret file. I’m glad of the rattlement of Brexit, I’m glad about the fury , but unklike Lisa, I still think there is hope with Mrs May, and perhaps there may even be a rethink fron the ghastly Junker , or at least the much nicer Donald Tusk. I think that the EU in essance is a good idea, but not if it is unable to listern.
It appears one can’t comment on the workng class until one is (academically at least) middle class. The received wisdom that the academic world (and by extension its uni-qualified but otherwise intellectually mediocre sausage machine graduates) are the ones able to pronounce on the state of society (or indeed of anything else) is the myth that has effectively kept bourgeois hegemony is place. And in this febrile post-’16 atmosphere no longer is even a token attempt made to mask Westminster’s, academia’s or the media’s open elitist contempt for working class voters. Why bother..?
You see, the working class still live in a curiously primitive world where to be, say, a chef or a mechanic, one needs to hold qualifications and have experience to eve get the minimum wage. On the other hand their betters, like Gideon, can get the Chancellor’s job with a Modern History certificate (and experience folding towels) and promptly double the national debt without personal consequences. Or Theresa can use her second class Geography certificate to overturn a democratic outcome, with seemingly no regard to the financial, political, economic and social consequences of her actions (despite previous failures at the Home Office). Speaker Bercow can do as he wishes, including losing MP’s fiddled expenses before 2012. So much incompetence, so many personal agendas, yet so little meaningful criticism (let alone punishment). And yet we working class still vote for them, still ask them to represent us at Westminster, still read their words every day because, after all, they are better educated than us…
Gawd bless ‘em (for the moment).
Fantastic, and absolutely spit on! My family are all northerners and pretty much all of them voted to leave the EU… including my Dad who’s an ex-welder, also a former shop steward who led a small strike in the 70’s.
Many of the comments on here are baffling to me. The greatest irony of all is that the Remain camp are quite clearly the uneducated fools, and seem to willfully ignore the most obvious facts that stare them straight in the eyes.
Fact’s like what? that we are getting the £350 million a week for the NHS?
Facts like, we pay billions to the EU, then in their great benevolence they give us some back. Thank you EU, we are so grateful for your generous hand-outs. Are we so incapable of using this money ourselves that the EU has to do it for us? Do we get back more than we pay in?
You were doing well until the last paragraph. There are rival groups calling themselves Yellow Vests in the UK, and the leaflet that was rightly ridiculed was a load of far-right nonsense, virtually the Tommy Robinson manifesto. Nothing to do with the working class.
I’m working class, now retired, but never became an academic. I agree with most of what you said. But I have to say that there are many good people in the Labour Party. I’m not a member now but I was during the Miner’s Strike, and like many of that time, stood in markets collecting for the Miners. The betrayal of the Miners was due to mealy-mouthed leaders who tried to stand on both sides at once (e.g., Kinnock with his equanimous condemnation of violence), but the long-term betrayal came later with Blair.
I was hoping that the election of Corbyn as leader of the Labour Party would make a difference. The problem is that even if he wins the next election, many of the MPs (like mine) would vote to sabotage any truly socialist change, without which, we are stuck in the same neoliberal capitalist shit-hole.
I was born and brought up in another country but have lived in England since 1973. One thing that seems to paralyse the English above all else is class. As an outsider, I can see this more clearly than most who class identify. The comedian Reginald D. Hunter compared Britain class system with America’s racism as an opportunity to discriminate against someone who looks likes you. Class, like race, is a toxic method to divide communities.
However, in reality, wanting to be in or leave the EU is not a really class thing. Yet, Ii has been painted as such by those to whom class is the social driver, so much so that many working class people feel falsely that Brexit is a working class position.
It’s time that people of all classes to evaluate political positions on their merits, rather than on class identity. There are plenty of middle and upper class leavers and working class remainers. Don’t try to make them out as class traitors.
Age is more of a predictor of where you stand on Brexit than class anyway.
“Instead there has been an ugliness that comes with the entitlement of always being right.” You may be right that this is how people feel about remain campaigners, but for many of us on the other side of the argument, the problem is precisely that Brexit will inflict irreparable damage on the very people you are writing about. As a relatively prosperous retired middle class white man, it won’t make much difference to me, but it will accelerate the devastation which many working class people have experienced int he last decade. If I could see any reason to expect things to be better for anyone other than a small neoliberal elite, I would consider changing my mind, but I can’t.
I’m not sure( Brexit will cause irreparable damage to poor people.) I have not changed my guess that Britian sacrificed it’s manufacturing industries to Germany, and food production to France , Iraly and other EU countries because with the Financial Service sector in Lodon doing so well. Perhaps it was thought that a strong pound could make importing much cheaper.than home production. The problem is that people need to be able to earn a living in worthwhile jobs in order to even want to get up in the morning..People like to make things.and it is not enough to throw money with denegrating income support.Perhaps Brexit will bring a new energy for manufacturing , or new businesses technology will allow. Some of the towns within the UK have been reduced to great poverty . Parts of England have become the 3rd world and have more poverty than there was in the 50s 60s and 70s . At least then people were pulling together to recover after the 11 World war. Now such places are derided as left behind rather than being a victim of lop sided economic policy.
Young and BME working class people don’t (statistically speaking) believe in Brexit, and yet they suffer more than their old and or middle-aged, white counterparts. Curious that our media let the old and the white off the hook, whilst it demonises other groups for comparatively less heinous acts.
“When a list of demands by the Brexit Yellow Jackets was being shared and ridiculed on social media because of its confusion and poor grammar, there was no empathy or even acknowledgment that a poorly-educated working class in a wealthy society is a shame upon us all, and is a failure of a system not an individual. For every public sector worker, academic, journalist, and politician that shared those demands with the intention of shaming those that had written it: you are the reason we have Brexit. Brexit has let those rational, liberal masks slip, and you are ugly.”
What is ugly is suggesting that demands by a group of Nazis is anything to do with working class people and their education levels. What is also ugly is suggesting that Brexit happened because people attack Nazis. Do we have to dance around the feelings of racist white men because they represent the working class, but their victims don’t get to be working class too. Are only white northern stereotypes working class and do only their views count. This is dangerous thinking and deeply insulting to working class people.
I’m happy to continue this debate- however ‘Zoe’ it would be nice to know who I am really talking to.
This article is about the last 40 years of class prejudice, and policy that has destroyed working class people in the UK. This isn’t about white men, and I have no idea what your argument is about Nazis unless you are suggesting that everyone that voted Brexit is a Nazi, which is pretty standard from the middle class that have no knowledge of any working class people.
I’m sorry you think this article is deeply insulting to working class people, perhaps if you spoke to some, you might find out that what is deeply insulting is the way they have been ridiculed, laughed at and de-valued over many many years.
Can we stop blaming the working class for Brexit please? It was the affluent Eurosceptics who made up the bulk of the vote! This kind of stuff is deeply unhelpful!
I am in doubt that the Rich and Shameless have now got hod of Brexit and a no deal Brexit will be a disaster for working class people, I am not a Brexiteer, equally the Remain camp are odious and full of class prejudices, that they refuse to acknowledge and instead gaslight working class people, and especially those of us that dare move into their territory ‘academia’ however my argument stands, I have a lifetime of experience and 17 years of research experience of collecting, and analysing research, I’m an ethnographer and my research is rigorous, and those that know me know my research and life is not focused upon the white working class, working class people are black, brown, asian, and white, and mixed race like my own son. I suspect that those who wish to deny what I say are taking offence to the fact that I see them.
Dear Lisa
you say that ” I’m an ethnographer and my research is rigorous”
could you explain what that means? a genuine question from another social researcher: what is ethnography to you?
There were some personal observations in your piece but I wondered where the ‘ethnography’ lay?
Clearly ‘rigour’ is a shared value and all academics claim that but few claim to be ‘ethnographers’….. hence my question.
thanks for any enlightenment you can offer
all best
Michael
I’ve written a response which might be of interest: “Fetishizing Brexit’s working class rage” https://anaemiconabike.com/2019/02/07/fetishizing-brexits-working-class-rage
Stated in The Bill of Rights 1689,
“That no foreign prince, person, prelate, state, or potentate hath, or ought to have any jurisdiction, power, superiority, pre-eminence, or authority, ecclesiastical or spiritual, within this realm: So help me God.”
Why then are we subject to the European Court of Justice and European Council ?
What on earth makes you think the EU is responsible for our terrible governments? You’re just looking for a scapegoat and an excuse, so you choose the EU. Easy to lump blame where it doesnt belong and pretend all your woes will magically vanish.
If you really want change, stop voting for the same two God awful parties every single general election!
Agreed. Vote anything except LibLabCon, or maybe Vote None.
Not “irrelevant and petty”, just misguided.
Brexit will solve none of the issues in this article. In fact it will exacerbate many of them if financial forecasts are correct.
The class structure and the exploitation of the working class and vicious abuse of the poor instigated by the governments of the last forty years is a completely different issue to whether it’s a good idea to work with neighboring countries to get economies of scale, better medical research etc.
By intertwining the two, she is continuing the work of the Mail, Express, Sun, Telegraph in manipulating the less educated. Shame.
Absolutely, my thoughts exactly. Just to touch on the Labour issue, I believe they will not embrace this matter. What it will take is for Brexit to actually go through by being pushed over the line by the Brexit Party who will in turn force the Conservatives to complete this process. Once all done and dusted Corbyn to come out all guns blazing.
If I recall correctly in the run up to the referendum Corbyn was absent and on holiday? Clearly he did not want to state he was in support of Brexit to appease some of his E.U supporting backbenchers, and voters which I believe the wrong decision. A lack of transparency A lack of transparency results in distrust.
As someone from a very similar area to Lisa , I am from North Notts originally, I have to agree with Lisa whole heartedly. I have never felt any connection with either Conservative or Labour. Conservatives seemed to just continue punishing such communities for the miners strikes for years and years while Labour considered it as such a safe seat that they did nothing to improve the lives of their constituents.
How can we trust any of the major parties?
Labour ruin the economy every time they are in power for longer than one term,
Conservatives spend their time in power punishing the poorest,
While Libdems have a mixture of sensible and outlandishly odd policies plus they can’t be trusted as shown by the betrayal of students over fees.
I am not saying the Brexit party has all the answers but if those who believe in Brexit are serious they have two serious issues to consider.
1st the outrageous “people’s vote” which seemly assumes Brexit supporters are not people too, how can the loses in a referendum demand another when they won’t accept the result of the last one.
2nd a manifesto needs to be created to support Brexit, however this manifesto needs to be kept simple
personally I would promise four things,
1 a drop in mp wages so we really are all in it together.
2 a change to the electoral system to dump first past the post which is highly problematic
3 serious overhaul to both education and the NHS so both have both the money and the mechanics to run smoothly without having to introduce payment by those using the service
4 finally an over haul of the tax system so those with a lot pay a little more around 2% extra but with the ability to offset this extra 2% by doing charitable work and providing resources for the staff and local community innwhich they are situated like crèches for working parents and providing funds for local facilities like toilets etc.
People like you blow my mind with your ignorance. Do you honestly think the Brexit Party is going to solve your problems? Do you really think Farage cares about the poor and working class when he sucks up to Trump? Are you really okay with the Union breaking up? Are you okay with putting the NHS under threat? Along with that are you really happy with the Conservatives and the Brexit Party doing trade deals with USA, China and Russia turning England into a theme park for foreigners, the very people the likes of you resent. If that’s the case, people like you deserve everything you get. The problem is everyone else will also suffer because of your ignorance and selfishness.
I’ve been a rough sleeper in London for 10 years but I can’t be bothered here to challenge the stereotypes which will come up. Mass immigration is the elephant in the room. Thing 1 and Thing 3 in “23 Things they don’t tell you about capitalism” by a Keynesian economist make the obvious point that wage rates in advanced countries depend on immigration control: Blair encouraged an influx of workers from Eastern Europe and sent about 150 civil servants to Eastern Europe to recruit cheap labour and put them on buses over here, seeding an invasion. People who undermine wages are basically scabs; it is because of this never ending army of reserve labour loved by capital that wages for the poor stay low and massive inequality exists. The affluent left look the other way and talk about racism: it’s bullshit. Then there is housing, which works in the other direction. I befriended a young woman who was trafficked here as a domestic slave from Lagos: when she got asylum, and become pregnant at the same time, she was put in temporary accommodation in the attic room of a house with 11 bedsits at £210/week per bedsit. Full of. crackheads who freaked her out and total firetrap. 56 steps she had to go up and down during her pregnancy – the ambulance men had to walk her down the stairs when she went into Labour. Dodgy Newham Council put her in there and ignored requests to get her out – you could smell the backhanders. They get away with it because of the massive increase in demand for housing caused by scab labour. On the street we are confronted with this shit every day; we can’t stand the left – we experience their fakeness and shallowness daily.
It seemed like a good idea at the time….
The rich and powerful saw the new tax legislation and an opportunity to avoid it in leaving the EU. So began the campaign. They had not analysed all the data, or, sufficiently projected all the consequences. Thus we now hear of these same wealthy people leaving and or, moving their business/investments elsewhere.
Once started, they could not reverse the wave they had created in appealing to peoples insecurities and dogma. I think even the Daily Mail changed its editor from a pro leave – to a pro remain person.
Cameron the leader of cruel cutbacks, did not want to leave the EU and yes a number of people voted purely for this reason.
I think Leaving the EU will bring about change, I am just not convinced it will be the type of change people will want. The rich rats jumping ship will not be here for the fallout, it will be the average British person on whose shoulders this will fall. I bloody hope they will use the opportunity to create change for the better. Sadly, I fear this will not be the case.
This article is problematic. The English ‘cultural’ working class are not nearly the most disadvantaged group in the UK. Many are home owners, ethnically English, rather entitled, and used to being flattered by popular media, but also poorly educated and easily manipulated. The ‘economic’ working class are younger, more ethnically diverse, better educated, and more aspirational but own no assets, and cannot progress in our unequal society.
The cultural working class voted for Brexit, hoping to protect their dwindling privileges from the economic working class who wish for more opportunities including open borders and EU rights. All suggestions that a virtuous working class need to be protected from uncaring EU policies is pure populist manipulation.
Camilla Bassi, your article is very good, thanks for sharing. We have to deconstruct this myth that it’s OK to be incoherently angry, whatever one’s class. Fetishising the working class is as damaging as it is patronising (and yes, before anyone says it, you can patronise your own people.. perfectly possible).
Two things stand out for me here. 1) Using the Brexit referendum as a protest might feel good, but is pointless, like putting a plaster on a gunshot wound. 2) As many others have commented, it ISN’T purely a working class thing.