Kemi Badenoch has now warned that identity politics could, in the long term, put Britain on a path towards civil war.
Which is quite a way to tell everyone else to calm down.
To be fair, buried under the theatrical sandbags there is a serious point. A country does need a shared civic identity. It does need one law, common institutions, equal citizenship, free speech, and some basic emotional commitment to the place. If the left treats Englishness as something faintly embarrassing, and the right turns it into a bloodline, then we are not improving the national conversation. We are merely handing everyone a slightly sharper stick.
But “civil war” is doing an awful lot of work there. It is the sort of phrase that arrives wearing a tin helmet and then insists it only meant it hypothetically. Badenoch says she doesn’t mean now, which is nice, but once you’ve lobbed “civil war” into the debate, the careful qualification follows behind with a mop and bucket.
And that lands in the same swamp as the regular complaint that “multiculturalism has failed”, usually said in that wonderfully grave tone people use when they think they’ve said something profound rather than merely opened a drawer full of slogans.
It is said as if multiculturalism were some strange experiment introduced sometime around 1997 by Tony Blair, a focus group and a man from Islington with a bicycle helmet. As if, before then, Britain had been a single, seamless, monocultural blancmange, lightly flavoured with Sunday roast and deference to the vicar.
Which is odd, because the first question to ask anyone who says multiculturalism has failed is very simple: what do you mean by multiculturalism? And that’s where the wheels tend to come off the pram.
There is, of course, a serious political philosophy version of multiculturalism, concerned with how a liberal state treats minorities fairly when supposedly neutral rules often reflect the majority culture. Fine. That’s a real argument, and not one to be settled between adverts on a phone-in.
But that is almost never what people mean when they announce that multiculturalism has failed. They usually mean they’ve noticed unfamiliar people doing unfamiliar things, and would like it upgraded into a theory.
Even as policy, I’m wary of the way multiculturalism can slide from equal citizenship into state-sponsored pigeonholes. It can end up taking something that already exists - a country full of different cultures, classes, religions, regions, habits and histories - and laying a policy document over the top of it, as if the act of naming it has somehow achieved something.
A bit like putting a brass plaque on a puddle and calling it a water feature.
The state doesn’t create cultural variety. People do that. So do ports, wars, trade, empire, migration, class, geography and people marrying someone their grandmother would have disapproved of. The useful job of the state is much plainer: protect equal rights, enforce one law, defend individual liberty and make sure nobody gets bullied by either the majority or their own community.
That isn’t multiculturalism. That’s just liberal citizenship, which has the advantage of being older, clearer and less likely to require a steering committee.
But if multiculturalism means a country containing different cultures, customs, classes, accents, religions, foods, manners, social codes and ways of life, then multiculturalism hasn’t failed. It’s just Britain. It has been Britain for about a thousand years, and probably longer if we include all the inconvenient people who arrived before the invention of Facebook outrage.
Start with class, because that punctures the whole balloon.
A white working-class man in Barnsley, a white barrister in Cheltenham, and a white duke pretending not to understand money are not living in the same culture just because they can all be placed under the same census heading. They dress differently, speak differently, eat differently, laugh at different things, read different papers, have different assumptions about authority, education, work, money, manners and whether it’s acceptable to say serviette.
The working class has a culture. The middle class has a culture. The aristocracy has a culture. The pit village had a culture. The Methodist chapel had a culture. The public school had a culture. The merchant navy certainly had a culture, and not one easily mistaken for a Surrey golf club. The City has a culture. The Scots have their own legal system. The Welsh have their own language. The Irish were never just a decorative footnote. Yorkshire continues to regard itself as a sovereign moral authority accidentally attached to England.
So Britain was never monocultural. Not even when it was overwhelmingly white.
And the older influences weren’t all stirred together into one smooth national soup either. They settled unevenly, as cultures usually do. The Norman influence didn’t vanish. It put on a better coat, acquired land, built castles, shaped the law and became the sort of thing people later called tradition. The Viking inheritance is still easier to hear in the north and east, especially in place names and dialect. The Dutch didn’t transform the whole country, but they certainly left their muddy fingerprints on the Fens. The Saxon inheritance sits differently again, more deeply embedded in language, settlement, monarchy and the old southern English story. Britain wasn’t harmonised into one culture. It was layered, patched, argued over and lived in.
Even the language tells on us. We still use Latin every day. Ad hoc. Per capita. Status quo. Habeas corpus. Prima facie. Pro rata. Curriculum vitae. Half the people complaining about foreign influence do so in a language assembled from Germanic roots, Norman French, Latin and whatever else washed ashore with a useful verb.
So when people say multiculturalism has failed, they usually don’t mean cultural difference has failed. Britain is made of cultural difference. What they are usually objecting to is not multiculturalism, but unfamiliar multiculturalism. Different skin colours. Different religions. Different clothes. Different food smells, as if an indigenous southerner confronted with tripe and onions wouldn’t assume civilisation had already collapsed somewhere north of Watford. People speaking another language within earshot of someone still emotionally recovering from decimalisation, although I suspect quite a few of the professionally alarmed would struggle to identify either Welsh or Urdu if they heard them on the London Tube.
And this is where the “they don’t integrate” argument begins to look a little tired around the cuffs.
Because if integration means taking part in the civic life of the country, ethnic minority Britons have done it rather inconveniently well. They vote. They stand for councils. They sit in Parliament. They serve in Cabinet. They become judges, doctors, teachers, soldiers, business owners, police officers, journalists, broadcasters, mayors and ministers. One became Prime Minister. Another became Mayor of London. Kemi Badenoch leads the Conservative Party. Sadiq Khan runs the capital. Lisa Nandy sits in Cabinet. At the time of writing, that is not a picture of people sulking outside the national tent refusing to join in. They’re in the tent, on the platform, arguing into the microphone while everyone else complains about the catering.
And Reform even has its own brown-skinned culture warrior in Zia Yusuf, which is almost too tidy for satire. A British Muslim businessman becomes one of the senior figures in a party whose ecosystem so often feeds on complaints about failed integration, and then the same political current still complains that minorities don’t join the national life. How much more integrated would they like him to be? He has not merely joined British civic life. He has joined the bit of British civic life that goes on television to complain about other people not joining British civic life. That is not failed integration. That is integration with a megaphone and a booking on GB News.
So when people still say “they don’t integrate”, one has to ask what “integrate” now means. Because it clearly doesn’t mean obeying the law. It doesn’t mean learning English. It doesn’t mean getting a job. It doesn’t mean paying taxes. It doesn’t mean voting. It doesn’t mean joining political parties. It doesn’t mean standing for office. It doesn’t mean becoming Mayor of the capital. It doesn’t even mean becoming Prime Minister, which seems a reasonably strenuous test unless one is being unusually fussy.
What it often seems to mean is this: they have integrated, but have inconsiderately remained brown while doing it.
That is the bit nobody wants to say plainly, because it sounds ugly once removed from its respectable packaging. So instead we get misty phrases about values, belonging, culture and cohesion. Some of that matters, obviously. A country does need shared civic norms. But if a brown-skinned person can enter the heart of British public life and still be treated as not quite belonging, then the test was never civic integration. It was ancestry with better table manners.
The Rishi Sunak argument exposed this rather neatly. Born in Southampton, educated here, elected here, Chancellor here, Prime Minister here, and still some people wanted to say he was British but not really English. At that point behaviour, loyalty, law, language and contribution have all been quietly moved aside. The real test has become bloodline. And once politics starts sniffing around bloodlines, it rarely improves the furniture.
That doesn’t mean every cultural practice should be accepted. Obviously not. This is where the grown-up distinction matters, which is probably why it so rarely survives contact with a phone-in.
A liberal country can contain many cultures. It cannot contain rival legal orders. It can tolerate different customs. It cannot tolerate unequal citizenship. Mosques, temples, synagogues, churches, Polish shops, Caribbean churches, curry houses, Diwali lights and Chinese New Year are not a threat to the state, unless the state is being held together with Blu Tack and resentment.
What it can’t tolerate is rights varying by tribe. It can’t tolerate women and children being subordinated to family honour, or criticism of ideas being treated as bigotry. And it certainly can’t tolerate self-appointed community leaders pretending they outrank individual conscience.
The line isn’t colour, religion or surname. It’s much duller than that, which is probably why nobody wants to shout about it on a phone-in. One law, equal citizenship, free speech, secular courts, and the right to leave your community without being treated as a traitor.
That is not an argument against cultural variety. It’s an argument for civic liberalism. You can have different cultures, different customs and different festivals, but the public square still needs one set of rules, otherwise it stops being a country and becomes a badly chaired residents’ association with flags.
So perhaps multiculturalism is a useless word, at least in ordinary political shouting. The serious version is about fairness, recognition and the limits of state neutrality. The phone-in version is usually about visible ethnic or religious difference. Class culture doesn’t count. Regional culture doesn’t count. Historical regional culture is allowed to call itself heritage, which is rather convenient.
Naval officers eating kedgeree and saying peculiar things at breakfast somehow count as British tradition, but a Sikh family keeping Punjabi customs becomes multiculturalism.
It’s not analysis. It’s selective noticing. It’s noticing the bits you’ve decided to be frightened of, and calling the rest heritage.
Which is a poor basis for national panic, but a surprisingly good one for a phone-in.










