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Racism is in retreat under Prime Minister Sunak

Jews should welcome the arrival of another PM from a minority community

October 24, 2022 15:38
GettyImages-1244196124
New Conservative Party leader and incoming prime minister Rishi Sunak waves as he leaves from Conservative Party Headquarters in central London having been announced as the winner of the Conservative Party leadership contest, on October 24, 2022. - Britain's next prime minister, former finance chief Rishi Sunak, inherits a UK economy that was headed for recession even before the recent turmoil triggered by Liz Truss. (Photo by JUSTIN TALLIS / AFP) (Photo by JUSTIN TALLIS/AFP via Getty Images)
3 min read

I’m old enough to have covered the General Election of 1987, when Margaret Thatcher won her third victory (her second landslide). That campaign also saw the election of the first four MPs of colour (all of them Labour) in modern times -  Paul Boateng (who later, under Tony Blair, became the first black Cabinet minster), Diane Abbott, Keith Vaz and Bernie Grant.

At the time, many commentators saw this as a milestone – a sign that Britain, which two decades earlier had witnessed Enoch Powell’s notorious “rivers of blood speech” and openly racist by-election campaigns, really was changing.

It may have taken another 35 years. But the unopposed coronation of Rishi Sunak as leader of the Tory Party and our next Prime Minister is also hugely important, especially given the diverse nature of much of the other talent on the Conservative front bench. Of course, he is not the first British PM from a minority background: that honour belongs to the great Benjamin Disraeli in 1868. But the fact the Tories chose Sunak is an event we ought to welcome with just as much enthusiasm as the election of Barack Obama as US president.

Racism – including the antisemitic variety – has not been banished from Britain. But it is in retreat.