Monday 4 September 2017

Not The People's Champion

Sarah Champion perfectly embodies the second and lower rungs of New Labour.

They came from the post-War New Class, so that by the 1990s they were often second generation university graduates with second generation professional jobs. But they came from places where politics simply meant the local squirarchy and its more or less deluded hangers on.

"The Tory candidate for anything always wins here, and always comes from the members or the entourage of one of the right families," they were told. "Take it or leave it." They couldn't take it, so they left it. At least since the War, they are the only category of people,  rather than purely individual cases, to have moved from the South to the North in order to have a career.

But they do not like the North, which they brought up to regard as a joke and where, if they had grown up here, then it highly unlikely that they would ever have joined the Labour Party. In fact, if they had grown up here and if they had wanted to go into politics, then they would have gone South for the purpose.

It is, however, a different question how far they would ever have got. The evisceration of the trade unions and of local government meant that it was easy for such candidates to be imposed on Labour areas. In Conservative areas, however, "The Tory candidate for anything always wins here, and always comes from the members or the entourage of one of the right families. Take it or leave it."

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