The Guardian view on the latest census: mapping
an ever more diverse country
Editorial
The public have accepted that Britain is not just
populated by white people – and have stopped imagining that it could ever be
otherwise
Tue 29 Nov
2022 18.50 GMT
In 1968,
the Conservative MP Enoch Powell delivered probably the most inflammatory
address ever given by a senior British politician. “As I look ahead, I am
filled with foreboding,” he declared. “Like the Roman, I seem to see ‘the River
Tiber foaming with much blood’.” The bloodletting, he anticipated, would be
taking place because of a race war. Seeing migrants arrive from Britain’s
former colonies in the Caribbean, Africa and Asia was, Powell said, “like
watching a nation busily engaged in heaping up its own funeral pyre”. Britain
in the half century since has repudiated Powell’s racist prophecy. Non-white
immigrants and their children are not an existential threat to this country,
but rather the source of some its most celebrated achievements.
Birmingham,
the city in which Powell gave his “rivers of blood” speech, has quietly become
among the country’s most diverse places. Along with London, Leicester, Manchester
and Luton, it is part of an urban England that is fast becoming more black and
brown than white. About four in 10 people in Milton Keynes, Nottingham and
Peterborough are non-white. The figure, according to the 2021 census published
on Tuesday, is roughly one in four in Bristol and Leeds. Despite the best
efforts of politicians like Powell and his ilk to turn people against each
other on the basis of race and ethnicity, a more multiracial, multicultural
country has become a feature of modern life. It is progress that the public
have overwhelmingly accepted that Britain is not just populated by white people
– and have stopped imagining that it could ever be otherwise.
Racism
continues to blot the landscape. British Bangladeshis are doing well at school,
yet they fare worse in the job market than they should, given their
qualifications. The shameful Windrush scandal, a result of the Conservatives’
hostile environment policy, saw British citizens of African-Caribbean descent
wrongly deported, dismissed from their jobs and deprived of services such as
NHS care. Inequalities remain baked into the system: Covid mortality rates
among some black and Asian groups were between 2.5 and 4.3 times higher than
among white groups, when all other factors were accounted for. Minorities were
not more susceptible because they were black or brown, but because they were
more likely to be poor.
Human
coexistence is not easy. The recent disturbances in Leicester, between groups
of Hindus and Muslims, show how difficult things can get. But preserving
Britain’s diversity requires hard work as well as good intentions. Racial
differences need managing to bridge divides, not widen them. The trouble is
that rightwing politicians have for too long profited by scapegoating outsiders
and stoking a belief of superiority in those they have nothing material to
offer. Pound-shop Powellites also flourished after Brexit, which yoked together
Europe and migration. For all the talk about how Rishi Sunak’s elevation to
prime minister should be celebrated as evidence of a government broadening its
talent base, the truth is that, were it up to the policies of this government,
there would be no Mr Sunak. Britain’s racial model is far from perfect. But
race, culture and ethnicity is lived in a far more convivial way than how it is
often evoked politically.
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