Yasmin’s Eye on …. Not Knowing Their Place

Something about Angela Rayner turns a whole lot of male politicians and commentators into jumpy and horny teenage boys. This Sunday, in the Sunday Times, Jason Cowley, editor of the New Statesman, portrayed her as  ‘a flame-haired, dangerous Labour beast’, vulnerable and anxious, and also, ‘self-glamourizing and self-mythologising’. In 2022, some unnamed male Conservative MPs told Mail on Sunday that Raynor crossed and uncrossed and her legs when Boris Johnson, then PM,  was at the dispatch box to distract him. Hurt and furious, Raynor told TV presenter Lorraine Kelly , [They]  talk about my background because I had a child when I was young as if to say I’m promiscuous… I think that’s how they try and sort of deal with me. Because they don’t really know how to deal with me.’ Not just Ms Raynor. That applies to anyone in public life who does not fit in or who breaks codes of class or sex behaviours.

In this nation, one must know one’s place. Or else. Tony Blair’s deputy, John Prescott, for example, was routinely ridiculed because he didn’t speak proper. The Guardian columnist Simon Hoggart was one of those scorners: “Every time Prescott opens his mouth, it’s like someone has flipped open his head and stuck in an egg whisk.’

Recent research by the Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR), found just 1% of Tory MPs entered parliament from a working-class job. While 13% of current Labour MPs had  a working-class occupation, the proportion has halved since the 1987. One hundred and fifty years after Thomas Burt, the first working class MP  was elected to parliament, this is where we are. Digest those abysmal figures.

Among the small minority who do get in, insubordinate  women cause more intense fears and distasteful excitement than their male counterparts.

Raynor provokes terror and prurience, including in her own party. The forthright feminist Labour MP Jess Phillips is also pilloried. She was accused of being a class traitor by left wingers after a magazine article featured her wearing glam designer clothes and trollers threaten her. One  tweeted he would pour molten metal into her vagina. Those relentlessly persecuting Dianne Abbott never sleep. Even after the grotesque racist attacks on her by a millionaire Tory donor, Starmer keeps her out in the cold. Another working class MP, Dawn Butler has spoken about the loneliness of the job and how, ‘There’s always somebody ready to criticise you, especially if you’re a Black woman. If I make a mistake it’s amplified.’

This has gone on through the decades and centuries. In my book Ladies Who Punch, fifty stories of women who refused to be defined and confined by society, I included the lissom Yorkshirewoman, Barbara Castle, another fiery redhead, fashionable, socialist who was a Labour MP from 1945 to 1979 and then a life peer. She backed the Dagenham female machinist strikers, pushed through the equal pay act and safe driving measures, had an affair with a married journalist,  and was, according to political journos, one of the most effective politicians ever. Yet Labour leader Hugh Gaitskell found Castle so insufferable, he told a journalist, ‘I could strangle her with my own hands.’

Think of the irrepressible and personable Mo Mowlam, who, according to her biographer Julia Langden, was humiliated by Tony Blair and hated by Gordon Brown  while she was Secretary of State for Northern Ireland. Peter Mandelson, her replacement,  railed about ‘that woman’ whilst admitting he would be ‘hopeless’ in the job.

Talented and ambitious and independent minded women have to survive and thrive in this nasty, macho political arena seething with jealousies, enmities and bitter sexism. While misogynists in the media prowl and try to catch them out.

Rayner had a poverty-stricken childhood, took care of her bipolar and illiterate mother, got pregnant at 16, left school without GCSEs, worked in care and became who she is through joining the union movement. Her most tenacious hunters include Michael Ashcroft, previously a non-dom and Rishi Sunak whose wife was also a non-dom for tax reasons and Mail writer, Dan Hodges. They’ve got their teeth into the  ‘lioness’. Their quarry is struggling. They  won’t let go.

Whatever the results of the  investigations into Rayner’s tax affairs and electoral rules, remember how hard it has been for her to be taken as a serious politician. She recalls her first steps into that space: ‘It was like going into Hogwarts…it can be intimidating to think of all the people who have stood at the dispatch box before me, as well as mixing with people from huge wealth, privilege and with expensive education….’

https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2022/jul/24/just-one-in-100-tory-mps-came-from-a-working-class-job-new-study-shows

For now, Starmer is supporting Rayner. For she has personality, power and passion; she moves voters. And he doesn’t. He may yet do what Gaitskell tried to do to Castle and Blair did to Mowlem. That would be very unwise.


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