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Goodbye to the Working Class: Social change, incompetence and sleaze push Labour to the brink

English

By (author): Reg Race

After 1979, Labour lost eight of the next eleven general elections. Working-class voters deserted, starting in 1970 when widespread abstention began, and the Conservatives won a majority of the working-class vote in 2019. Brexit was a consequence, and not the cause, of these massive changes. The number of manual workers, Labours heartland vote, has collapsed and Britain is now a nation where the biggest occupational groups are shopworkers, education and NHS staff. Demographics have challenged Labours ability to win. But thats not all. Labours Parliamentary Party is now overwhelmingly middle class, and Labour has left the working class as the working class has left Labour. It is now a Party of Councillors and Special Advisers, with a membership dominated by the public sector middle class. Labour has been the author of its own troubles too. It failed to adapt to change in the 1970s and 80s, attacked the low paid and appeased the powerful, and at a local level is disorganised and sometimes sleazy. Its failures are structural. There is no strategic plan, sectarianism is rife, it has regular financial crises, fragile or unelectable leaders are appointed, and disastrous rule changes are made in an age when social media and the internet can disrupt politics on a daily basis. Power has been turned upside down as a consequence. Political parties matter. Badly organised, ineffective leaderships create policy failures in government, and Labour has failed to ensure a supply of its own working-class or capable candidates too. Goodbye to the Working Class explains why and how this happened. It is a human story of significant consequence for our politics. See more
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Product Details
  • Dimensions: 159 x 245mm
  • Publication Date: 23 Sep 2021
  • Publisher: The Conrad Press
  • Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
  • Language: English
  • ISBN13: 9781914913020

About Reg Race

Dr Reg Race joined Labour in 1963 whilst at school. His family were compositors plumbers cotton weavers and bleachers. He gained a Political Science BA and Ph.D from the University of Kent contested a Canterbury City Council seat at the age of 22 and organised the first defeat for the Conservatives there since 1868. In 1972 he became research officer for NUPE and was Secretary of the National Steering Committee Against the Cuts organising against the biggest ever cuts in public spending. In 1979 he was elected as MP for Wood Green and was active on a womans right to choose worked to get a national minimum wage agreed by Labour campaigned to stop hospital closures and improve NHS pay and to change the law on child abductions and sex shops as part of a campaign to change the position of women in society. His constituency was abolished by the Boundary Commission in 1983 and he went to work for the GLC as a financial planner and was in charge of the Parliamentary Campaign against abolition. He was later Chief Executive of a successful data analytics business.

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