When Dominic Raab – standing in for Boris Johnson at Prime Minister’s Questions – winked at his opposite number, Angela Rayner, and said, “She was at the Glyndebourne music festival sipping champagne, listening to opera. Champagne socialism is back in the Labour Party,” two thoughts hit me.
First, I was reminded of the Harry Enfield sketch, Women:
Know Your Limits! and secondly, I recalled how, back in May 2020, then Health
Secretary Matt Hancock told Shadow health minister Dr Rosena Allin-Khan to watch
her “tone” after she asked a question about covid testing.
Matt Hancock and Shadow health minister Dr Rosena Allin-Khan |
It is depressing (if predictable) that women MPs are condescended to and patronised in Parliament, especially if they are competent, but the “Champagne socialism” jibe is interesting. There’s much cognitive dissonance at work when it is thought that people from working class backgrounds should not enjoy the arts while simultaneously holding that if they do, they cannot be proper socialists.
I lived in a council flat when I was young, I went to a
comprehensive school, I enjoy opera and ballet and I enjoy rock concerts. This
doesn’t make me anything other than ordinary and having a taste for different
things, but perhaps Dominic Raab would question my going to the Royal Opera
House because of my working class roots. As for my politics, I used to vote
Conservative, but no more; while I have drifted left, the Tories have lurched
disconcertingly further and further to the right.
It’s absurd that people are only expected to enjoy things
that are appropriate for the class they are perceived to belong to. Perhaps
Raab would be more comfortable if the poor and the socialists stuck to brown
ale and whippet racing.
Heaven forbid that someone should be quite well off, or even
wealthy, have an interest in the arts and espouse socialist views;
obviously they should immediately impoverish themselves. Then, and only then,
can they have an opinion on social inequality, one allowed only for victims of
it. Bonus points if they then have to claim benefits, for their critics can
then label them scroungers.
Overuse of phrases like ‘Champagne socialist’ as insults
ends with them losing their meaning. The phrase was originally used by
socialists themselves to describe those of a more centrist persuasion (the
first Labour Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald was labelled a ‘champagne
socialist’,’ and his lavish lifestyle and mingling with high society was
believed to be the corrupting influence that ended the Labour administration in
1931) but is now simply used by the right-wing to have a pop at Labour
politicians for not being true to the working class archetype.
Ramsay MacDonald, the original 'champagne socialist' |
In a similar manner, ‘woke’ is a word which has had its meaning corrupted. Originally used in the sense of being well-informed and up-to-date, it is now more usually taken to mean alert to racial or social discrimination and injustice. It has been hijacked - mostly by right-wing pundits and media – and used as a pejorative term when they see or hear something that doesn’t chime with their world view. So, when a supermarket runs an advertising campaign that doesn’t exclusively feature white people, ‘woke’ is thrown at them as an insult and Twitter is suddenly awash with #Boycott (insert name of store).
It’s tiresome and it’s lazy, but it’s pernicious and nasty
too, because using it as an insult says, in effect, that discrimination should
be tolerated, that being indifferent to - or positively in favour of - racism,
discrimination, and injustice are acceptable.
There’s a commonly used phrase, “Go woke, go broke,” that
suggests that companies that are woke will go out of business as non-woke folk
boycott them. To the best of my knowledge, this has not happened yet.
In or around the same ball park is ‘snowflake’. This one
crosses the political divide and is used by left and right as an insult to
anyone who is offended by a particular point of view, usually on the basis that
it is unreasonable that they are offended. Those using the term judgementally
frequently have limited arguments to back up their position. In fact, using
their own definition, they are often themselves snowflakes.
‘Gammon’ is similar, and like woke and snowflake, is just
thrown out as an insult to people who have a different point of view. The view
may be objectionable, but debate it rather than throw insults. All of these are
simplistic, formulaic responses used for want of cogent arguments.
While George Orwell’s 1984 is the place to go to see
language corrupted, how the meaning of words can be twisted so that virtue
becomes vice, and vice becomes virtue, there are plenty of real life examples
today. As with ‘woke,’ so with ‘elite.’ Defined as “the richest, most powerful,
best educated, or best trained group in a society,” its meaning has been turned
on its head, so when you hear a politician sneering about the “elite” you can
bet your bottom dollar that they don’t mean the richest or the most powerful
members of society: They especially don’t mean themselves. The irony of Donald
Trump, or Boris Johnson, or Nigel Farage accusing others of being the elite is off
the scale.
To return to Angela Rayner and the accusation of her being a
champagne socialist; the former head of English National Opera John Berry was
quoted in the Observer as saying, “It’s incredibly sad and
embarrassing. Coming under attack for going to an opera is ridiculous.”
In photos that appeared online, Angela Rayner looked perfectly at ease at Glyndebourne, unlike many politicians taken out of their normal milieu and pictured in places alien to them, doing things that are not normal for them. Nigel Farage’s natural home may be the pub with a pint in hand, but for many other right-wing politicians, attempting to connect with ‘ordinary folk’ is fraught. Who can forget David Cameron eating a hot-dog with a knife and fork? America’s NBC was among news networks at home and abroad that could not resist poking fun at what they called Cameron’s “cutlery awkwardness.”
So, if a champagne socialist is a Labour politician who enjoys a wealthy and luxurious lifestyle, what is a right-winger who wants to make out that they are one of the boys, a working class hero: A brown ale Tory, perhaps?
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