Owen Jones: The Incoherence Of Englishness, And Why Ed Miliband’S En

OWEN JONES: THE INCOHERENCE OF ENGLISHNESS, AND WHY ED MILIBAND’S ENGLAND IS A LOST COUNTRY

Friday 08 June 2012

Labour would do better to champion the interests of

the working people it was set up to represent

Owen Jones Author Biography

What does it mean to be English? I’ve asked strangers and friends
this question a number of times, and the standard response has been
a blank face. Yesterday, I posed the question on Twitter (disclaimer:
not a scientific polling method), and was inundated with hundreds of
replies. Barely anybody attempted to define what Englishness was: a few
suggested football, queuing and tea. I can certainly identify with the
last: I am never going on holiday without a bag of PG Tips ever again.

No other demographic in Britain spends more time mulling over what
“Englishness” means than a well-connected coterie of think-tankers,
political advisers and certain academics. Their efforts came to
full fruition yesterday with Ed Miliband’s much-trailed speech on
Englishness. “Presidential State of the Union speeches are less
worked on this one,” one Labour MP told me. It is an intervention
that bears the hallmarks of Jon Cruddas, the new head of Labour’s
policy review. Labour politicians had “been too nervous to talk of
English pride and English character,” Miliband argued, for fear of
undermining the Union and being tarred with racist nationalism.

The Labour leadership is talking about Englishness for a number of
reasons. Firstly, they lack a coherent narrative, or “story”, as some
advisers put it. How the next Labour government would meet people’s
need for jobs, housing and good wages is unclear. With “Englishness”,
the party offers a “story” to fill that vacuum. But it is also tapping
into a perceived surge in a sense of English identity, driven by
devolution in Scotland and Wales. A report by the IPPR earlier this
year revealed that 17 per cent of people in England rejected the
“British” label altogether in favour of “English”; and nearly a
quarter opted for “more English than British”.

That doesn’t mean “Englishness” is a priority for most: I doubt many
spend much of their life thinking about it unless asked.

Bread-and-butter issues, particularly at a time of economic crisis,
are more pressing, and Labour has to answer them if it is to claw
back some of the five million voters who abandoned the party during
its 13 years in office. The report hinted at tensions within England,
too: nearly nine out of 10 Northerners felt London was one of the
regions the Government best looked after, compared with just 1 per
cent who felt the same about the North-west or Northeast. But it is
certainly true that nationalism has been on the rise across Britain,
and it’s not just down to devolution.

Partly, it is the consequence of a decline in traditional forms of
belonging. A sense of working-class pride has been battered over the
past 30 years. Nearly half of workers were members of trade unions
in the late 1970s; it is little over a quarter today, and unions are
less relevant in people’s everyday lives. The sense of solidarity
they provided was never replaced. The old industrial jobs were often
dirty and backbreaking, as well as often excluding women. But there
was a sense of pride attached to working in a mine or a dock; that is
often missing for those who, for example, stack shelves at Tesco. You
don’t have communities based around supermarkets or call centres as
you might have had with, say, a steelworks.

Much of the left has traditionally been wary of nationalism precisely
because of a belief that working people share common interests; nations
just divide them up. “The workers have no country”, as Karl Marx and
Friedrich Engels wrote in The Communist Manifesto. “We cannot take
from them what they have not got.” When the First World War broke
out a generation after Marx’s death, a large chunk of his European
followers wrapped themselves in their respective flags and cheered
on as millions of working-class people were sent by their rulers to
slaughter each other.

But Marx and Engels were right: it is our conflicting interests that
make national identity so problematic. A supermarket checkout worker in
Manchester has more in common with a call centre worker in Aberdeen –
or Paris or Athens, for that matter – than, say, a hedge-fund manager
or globe-trotting billionaire based in London.

We have a habit of airbrushing our nation’s history, too. A big
part of it involved the horrors of Empire. Turkey is often assailed
for not acknowledging the Armenian genocide, but most of us aren’t
even aware of the deaths of millions of Indians under English (and
Scottish and Welsh) rule, as detailed by Mike Davis’s book Late
Victorian Holocausts.

We also hear a lot about the sacrifices made fighting against external
threats; but a big part of our history was English people struggling
against each other for their freedom – the oppressed versus the
oppressor. To be fair, Miliband hinted at it in his speech. It goes
back to the Peasants’ Revolt against the remnants of feudalism in
the 14th century; the English Revolution of the 1640s, in which we
deposed of our king 150 years before the French; the Chartists of the
19th century, who were the world’s first working-class movement; the
suffragettes; early trade unionists; the anti-fascists who said “they
shall not pass” to Oswald Mosley’s Blackshirts in the 1930s; and so on.

There is no coherent or cohesive “Englishness”. It is a catch-all
term for all those who live in England’s borders, who have a
range of identities, interests and histories. Other than newspaper
columnists like myself, I doubt most will spend much time musing
over Ed Miliband’s thoughts on Englishness. Labour would do better to
talk about championing the interests of the people it was set up to
represent: working people, regardless of their national affiliations.

http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/commentators/owen-jones-the-incoherence-of-englishness-and-why-ed-milibands-england-is-a-lost-country-7827757.html