‘Incendiary,
inaccurate, careless’: Handsworth locals reject Jenrick’s race claims
Businesspeople
and residents say senior Tory’s ‘no white faces’ claim is divisive and plain
wrong – and the Birmingham neighbourhood is thriving
Neha
Gohil Midlands correspondent
Tue 7 Oct
2025 20.14 BST
Business
owners and residents in Handsworth have fiercely rejected claims by the shadow
justice secretary, Robert Jenrick, that the Birmingham area is “one of the
worst integrated places I’ve ever been to”, describing the comments as
“careless” and “ill-informed”.
Jenrick
is facing growing criticism from ministers and MPs after the Guardian revealed
comments he made at a dinner earlier this year, where he said he “didn’t see
another white face” while filming in Handsworth and said it was not the kind of
country he wanted to live in. It was “as close as I’ve come to a slum in this
country”, he said.
After
highlighting the lack of white people, Jenrick said it was not about “the
colour of your skin or your faith” and he wanted people to live alongside each
other.
David
Volante, a shop manager at a pawnbrokers on Soho Road and director at the Soho
Road business improvement district (BID), said Jenrick’s comment on not seeing
another “white face” was a “highly inaccurate” portrayal of the area.
“I’m on
[Soho Road] up to 50 hours a week from working and leisure time and there’s
countless white faces on the road. As a white British man, I don’t feel under
any minority, or under any safety threat to myself at all around here.”
Steven
McLean, 54, who grew up in Handsworth in the 1970s, said the area had got a
“lot of bad press over the years – some for good reason, a lot of it for bad
reasons”, and described Jenrick’s comments as “purposefully incendiary”.
McLean,
who was not aware of Jenrick’s comments before being asked, said “we know who
that statement is for”, adding: “There’s a lot of sentiment that’s going to be
whipped up. I think at best it’s careless.”
Maria,
65, who runs Davies’ West Indian Bakery on Soho Road and did not want to share
her last name, was also not aware of Jenrick’s comments. When asked about the
remarks, Maria said they were not true and her customers were diverse. “We have
Chinese, we have white, we have Asians, we have eastern Europeans, we have
Africans. I’m African, so it’s very diverse to me.”
According
to Birmingham city council, the ethnicity of Handsworth is 25% Pakistani, 23%
Indian, 10% Bangladeshi, 16% Black African or Black Caribbean, 10% mixed or
other ethnic group and 9% white.
A
23-year-old woman born and raised in Handsworth, who did not want to be named,
said the area was “quite nice if you get to know it” adding diverse communities
“contribute a lot to this area”.
The woman
described Jenrick’s remarks as “not great” and said they came from someone who
was not born or raised in the area. “They just depict what they see on the
outside.”
She
added: “If you were to come at a specific time, yes there might be more Asian
people or more mixed people than white. But sometimes if you come, you might
find more white people than there’s mixed people. So it depends what time you
come, which area you go to.”
A
spokesperson for Jenrick initially declined to comment on the Guardian’s
revelations. But later on Monday, Jenrick defended his comments, saying: “Six
separate government reports over 20 years have highlighted the problem of
parallel communities and called for a frank and honest conversation about the
issue.
“The
situation is no better today. Unlike other politicians, I won’t shy away from
this issue. We have to integrate communities if we are to be a united country.”
In the
comments, made at the Aldridge-Brownhills Conservative Association dinner on 14
March, Jenrick also said: “I went to Handsworth in Birmingham the other day to
do a video on litter and it was absolutely appalling. It’s as close as I’ve
come to a slum in this country.”
Bob Balu,
the chair of the Soho Road BID, who was born in Handsworth and now lives in
Wolverhampton, said the description of Handsworth as a “slum” was wrong.
“I’d love
Robert to come here and sit with us, have a coffee or cup of chai, and tell me
exactly what he’s saying” he said, adding: “We’ve got a waiting list of
businesses. International businesses want to set up business in this ‘slum’.”
Volante,
who also criticised Jenrick’s description of a “slum” as “ill-informed”, said
Jenrick’s comments could have a “massive” impact on businesses in the area.
“When
people are making accusations and comments like that, it gives people an easy
choice to go somewhere else to spend their money. It doesn’t help businesses,
it doesn’t help the local community and it’s very damning to everybody.
“This is
not a no-go zone, this is an area where people walk in harmony on the street,
acknowledge each other and get on respectfully. Those kinds of comments are a
detriment to people’s livelihoods,” he said.
Parminder
Bansil, 70, and Harbinder Bansil, 67, whose son lives in Handsworth, said they
were hoping to move to the area and did not agree with Jenrick’s comments.
Harbinder
said she volunteers with the local Gurdwara, adding: “The Gurdwara helps
anybody and everybody, whatever colour, whatever age you are.”
Parminder
added Jenrick may have made the comments to get “publicity”, adding “the more
controversial comments they make, the more publicity they’re going to get”.

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