The UK will have a new Labour government whose class composition would be radically different from previous ones.
About 46 percent of British Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s likely Cabinet members were raised by parents with “working class” occupations, Project Syndicate’s analysis of Labour’s shadow Cabinet showed. That figure is well above average in terms of the broader working population, and it stands in stark contrast to the 7 percent of outgoing Conservative Cabinet members of working-class origin.
Similarly, while 69 percent of former British prime minister Rishi Sunak’s Conservative government was privately educated at some point, the figure for Starmer’s likely Cabinet is 17 percent. That is significantly lower than even previous Labour Cabinets. About 32 percent of former British prime minister Tony Blair’s first Cabinet was privately educated, compared with 35 percent under former prime minister Harold Wilson and 25 percent under former prime minister Clement Attlee. Nationwide, about 10 percent of the UK’s population has been privately educated at some point.
Illustration: Tania Chou
Starmer himself personifies this shift. The son of a toolmaker, he spoke continually of his working-class roots during the campaign.
“We were in a position on occasion where we couldn’t pay our bills … so I know how that feels,” he said during his first debate against Sunak.
This changing class profile could have significant political implications.
In the book Born to Rule: The Making and Remaking of the British Elite, the authors drew from a survey of more than 3,000 people in Who’s Who (the UK’s longstanding catalog of “noteworthy and influential people”) to show that British elites from working-class backgrounds tend to tilt to the left politically and socially. They are more likely to favor increasing taxes on the rich, to emphasize reducing poverty and to think the UK is a racist country.
Class origins do not only affect latent attitudes. The authors analyzed every decision ever made by the British Supreme Court and found that rulings by judges with upper-class backgrounds tended to favor the right (such as by limiting the power of the state or supporting big business). This residual influence of family origin might be even more acute among politicians. Interviews with Labour members of parliament from working-class backgrounds revealed that their political identities were strongly rooted in their early experiences and the influence of left-leaning parents, grandparents and local communities.
There are already some signs that the class composition of Starmer’s government would affect its policymaking. For example, Starmer has maintained a steely commitment to increasing taxes on private schools and abolishing the “non-dom” tax exemption (for people who live in the UK, but declare a permanent residence in another country). Both are issues that Labour governments in the past failed to address.
However, this is not to suggest that the new government would be unleashing a class war. While politicians change frequently, most elites stick around for considerably longer. To get anything done, Starmer and other key working-class Labour figures — such as British Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner and Secretary of Health and Social Care Wes Streeting — would have to work with elites in the civil service, the business world and beyond who do not share their class origins.
In fact, the authors’ research shows that over the past century, those from privileged backgrounds have remained vastly overrepresented among the wider British elite — namely, those included in Who’s Who. Since the 1890s, if you hailed from the top 1 percent of the wealth distribution, you were 20 times more likely than others your age to reach the British elite.
Even with the notable decline in their relative power, alumni from the country’s nine most elite private schools — the group of Clarendon Schools that includes Eton, Harrow and Winchester — are still 52 times more likely to reach the British elite than those who attend any other type of school. This high degree of class reproduction matters, because elites from more privileged backgrounds also bring with them a rightward-tilting politics shaped by their life experiences.
Labour has long wrestled with this tension. Blair eagerly sought business magnate Rupert Murdoch’s endorsement, and Starmer has worked hard to garner support from the UK’s business leaders. He has placed great emphasis on endorsement letters signed by executives and even trotted out a billionaire who formerly donated to the Conservative Party.
It is worth noting that the corporate executives in the authors’ data are far more likely to be economically and culturally conservative — favoring lower taxes and less public investment, and espousing more reactionary views on race and the legacy of colonialism. The price of winning over this corporate elite therefore could be a change of direction on some issues.
Moreover, some within Labour’s ranks are already sympathetic to the UK’s corporate elite, not least because they are wealthy themselves. Class origins might shape political commitments, but they do so in the context of current wealth. The authors’ data reveal that elites from working-class backgrounds who go on to become wealthy tend to be more conservative than elites from the same class origin who have amassed fewer assets.
Although we do not have detailed data on the economic circumstances of the new Cabinet members, we do know that many had successful careers before entering politics. Few came up through the trade-union movement or spent much time in working-class jobs. Professional, well-paid careers mingled with working-class backgrounds tend to produce a somewhat unpredictable combination that could manifest itself in capricious ways.
Many Labour politicians might retain a latent desire to tackle class inequality, as the authors’ results suggest. However, these members of parliament would be torn between a longstanding sense of injustice inculcated through their family life, their very real economic advantages today and the wider political context in which they are operating. Whatever Labour’s leading figures might personally feel, they could end up suppressing the influence of their working-class roots. As Labour returns to power after almost 15 years in the wilderness, class would certainly matter, even if there is no class war.
Aaron Reeves is professor of sociology and social policy at the University of Oxford. Sam Friedman is a professor of sociology at the London School of Economics and Political Science.
Copyright: Project Syndicate
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