The new Tory equality agenda is far more than a victory over wokeness

A piece by Fraser Nelson, editor of The Spectator, published online by the Telegraph last night:

After a decade of pointless Tory “equality” speeches, it’s rare to come across one that’s worth listening to. In her role as equalities minister, Liz Truss announced yesterday that it’s time for a counter-revolution: to move away from seeing everything through the prism of race, sexuality or gender and to start seeing inequality in all of its dimensions. So also looking at north vs south, rich vs poor, city vs country. This matters because, if the Tories get it right, it could add up to a new modernisation agenda to guide them through the wreckage of Covid and lockdown.

The plan has been building for some months, and it starts with an analysis of where the Tories have got things wrong. David Cameron had nothing to say on equalities: worse, he told his party not to oppose Harriet Harman’s Equality Act and adopted her agenda wholesale. Theresa May was no better, exaggerating police abuses of stop-and-search and even inviting David Lammy, one of Labour’s most energetic culture warriors, to lead a review into racial injustice in the courts. He found no evidence of discrimination, but still pretended otherwise.

The Tory way, it seemed, was to try and beat Labour at its own game. Cameron once announced it was a scandal how young black men in Britain are more likely to be in prison than at a good university. The problem was that his statistic was nonsense: whites are the demographic least likely to go to university. All this baffled his new MPs, many of whom were brought in as part of Cameron’s A-list but were deeply uncomfortable with what they saw as tokenistic, patronising language. “Our whole equalities agenda was driven by a feeling of Old Tory guilt,” one Conservative MP tells me. “They’d tell the non-white MPs what to say, rather than ask their opinion. The conversation is finally changing.”

It started to change when Boris Johnson was elected and brought in Munira Mirza as his policy chief. Her views on all this were outlined in a Spectator cover story attacking Mrs May’s equalities agenda. It’s possible to acknowledge that racism still exists, she said, “without turning its waning influence into the pretext for a bogus moral crusade”. She made the case for a rival approach – which now seems well under way. Ms Truss’s speech is the latest in a carefully planned Tory counter-attack.

Kemi Badenoch, Ms Truss’s deputy in the equalities brief, went viral on YouTube after a speech declaring “critical race theory” to be the new Tory enemy. This marked, in effect, the Tories joining a battle that they had spent 10 years running away from. She also denounced the rise of “unconscious bias training”, where employees are encouraged to think of ways in which they might be unknowingly bigoted. Julia Lopez, a Cabinet Office minister, announced this week that such “training” was to end in the civil service. It’s not just pointless, she said, but it reinforces damaging stereotypes.

This is the new Tory theme. To reject the old equalities agenda as the disease of which it purports to be the cure – promoting stereotypes, discrimination and division. It also means talking more warmly about Britain. Rishi Sunak told me recently that he’s in politics to repay the country that gave his family every chance in life – a country, he says, that thinks nothing of having a Hindu Chancellor placing Diwali lights on the steps of Downing Street. From any background, it’s not hard to see Britain as one of the best places in the world to live, he argues, if you look at the facts.

In her speech, Truss said her new equalities agenda would involve “facts, not fiction” – which will likely mean publication of studies to open a new conversation about race and culture. Why do those from Indian, Chinese and African backgrounds tend to do better than whites at school and on pay, while Bangladeshis and Caribbeans tend to do worse? The simplistic “BAME vs white” narrative has never stood up to scrutiny in Britain, but Tories have always shied away from applying that scrutiny. No longer. Truss says she’s setting up a new scrutiny unit, based in the north of England.

Which, of course, is her final point. Seeing equality the old way – denouncing discrimination where it really exists – but broadening the debate to take in the north-south divide, the white working class and other left-behind groups. This matters because Covid (and lockdown) will have just torn open inequalities that had been closing for a decade. Studies already show disadvantaged pupils in England are now 18 months behind their peers by the time they finish their GCSEs. Almost a third of pupils applying for university say they had no contact with their school during lockdown. Will they ever be given support to make up this lost ground?

The coming wave of redundancies – already bigger than in the last crash – will hit men harder than women and the young harder than the old. Then comes the likely increase in family breakdown (Citizens Advice has reported a spike in divorce inquiries) and the health effects of isolation, especially on the elderly. These are all problems that have not been properly measured, but if Ms Truss’s new equality scrutiny unit can do the job, at least ministers will know where the damage is to fix. It would rejuvenate the idea of an equalities agenda, giving it an urgent and deeply practical relevance.

Tories tend to dislike talking in such language. Their “Equality Act” was the Academies Act, which did so much to liberalise schools and close attainment gaps. Welfare reform led to a jobs boom that lifted the earnings of those at the bottom faster than anyone’s over the last decade. But as far as I’m aware, not a single Tory minister has ever pointed this out. The party has always seemed blind to – or, at worst, disinterested in – its own social justice achievements. Too many Tories still see “progressive conservatism” as a contradiction in terms.

Ms Truss called her speech the new “fight for fairness”, something that will be needed more than ever after recent devastation. The economy may well make a speedy recovery, but those abandoned by their school will need the kind of help that won’t show up in GDP figures. All told, it’s the perfect time for the Conservatives to reclaim and revive the equalities agenda: there is all too much work to do.

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Women, Relationships and Victim Mentality – Regarding Men

Enjoy (video, 45:40). It starts with a review of an article, “Self-Victimhood is a Personality Type, Researchers Find”.


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Our woke opponents are laughing at us

A piece, the first in a series for TCW, by Peter Mullen, a Church of England clergyman, writer and broadcaster, published today.


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How to end the Gender Death Gap

Interesting (video, 2:38).


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Pro-life feminism is a thing

I was interested to notice an article at The Scoop published recently, titled Why Has The Feminist Movement Betrayed Women?

The piece begins:

Abortion is the ultimate exploitation of women. Abortion betrays the basic feminist principles of nonviolence, non-discrimination and justice for all.”

And it’s a noble sentiment. A naïve but noble sentiment. If feminism was what feminism is to the unnamed author of this piece, it may well be a benign if not benevolent force. Unfortunately, we can see from the terrorism of the U.K.’s First Wave Suffragettes to the abortion issue itself that nonviolence is not a feminist principle. Unfortunately, we can see from consistent feminist pushes to establish, entrench and expand upon privileges for women and girls that non-discrimination is not a feminist principle. And unfortunately, we can see from #TimesUp, #MeToo, campaigns for ever more lenient treatment of the female minority in prison (ignoring the majority) and lobbying to institute a believe all women approach in both family courts and sex crime cases that justice for all is certainly not a feminist principle.

The piece continues:

The feminist movement has the responsibility of promoting protection of the human rights of women from conception to natural death, the foundation right being the right to life. The feminist movement should be at the forefront in seeking protection of women in the first nine months of life in their mother’s womb.”

I only wish that the feminist movement would accept such a responsibility. I can empathise with the concept of that responsibility falling to feminists, it does seem natural, and yet the mainstream of feminism is radically pro-abortion and utterly intolerant of anyone who thinks differently – which is, I assume, why this author remains anonymous.

The piece ends:

We stand in solidarity with women who have been betrayed by those they count on the most, with women who have underestimated their own strength, with women who have experienced abortion and are silent no more, with young men and women who mourn their missing siblings. We mourn with those pregnant women who naively went to Family Planning seeking help and were offered :assistance” and were encouraged to terminate the life of their precious child. We mourn with men who weren’t given a choice or who contributed to an abortion that they now regret.

All this is unthinkable.”

J4MB echoes the sentiment and extends a hand to anyone, feminist or non, who will object to the mass slaughter of the most vulnerable members of our society.


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Doc Morris’ Christmas advert is 2020’s second pro-paternal tear jerker

This lovely (2:55) film from a Dutch pharmaceuticals company celebrates the dedication of a grandfather. With 4.5k upvotes to 61 miserable downvotes on YouTube for this one at the time of writing, it’s very clear that the public is hungry for positive messages about masculinity.


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Coca Cola’s pro-father 2020 Christmas Advert will bring a tear to your eye

The best thing about this (2:30) short film is not that it’s a genuinely well-crafted and utterly moving tribute to the lengths that fathers will go to for their children. The best thing about this short film is that a bunch of experts and executives at one of the worlds biggest companies, whose bottom line is what will sell more of their beverage, concluded that promoting a father-positive message was the best way to go. Eyes on their ratio of likes and dislikes (67k to 3.2k) as compared to Gilette’s 2019 anti-male car crash (823k to 1.6m) and be happy!


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Stephanie Cleary, Alberta judge, taints sex assault trial by ‘entering the fray’ and seeming to advocate for female victim

Our thanks to Professor Janice Fiamengo for tweeting a link to this from January 2019. Janice writes:

Disturbing example of a judge with feminist convictions so strong she could not restrain herself during a rape trial. This case will be retried. But one wonders about other rape trials she presides over, where she *will* restrain herself–but not her bias.


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The inexorable march of Big Tech censorship

A piece by Frederick Edward, just published by TCW.


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Two defeats for the woke brigade – but they’ll be back

An interesting piece by Dr Campbell Campbell-Jack, a retired Presbyterian minister, in today’s TCW.


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