How do you define the haves and the have nots, Trisher?
I am not being argumentative here, I just wonder whether the changes in society since the pre-war days have not increased the proportions of people who now consider themselves, and would be considered by others, to be haves, rather than have nots, compared to those days.
Then, there were far more people living in the conditions of abject poverty described in The Road to Wigan Pier than there are now, and although there is still deprivation, it is not on the same scale or proportion as in the 30's.
Wasn't it J. Prescott who said 'We're all middle class now'?
How can Labour address those changes and keep the support of the newly middle class while still adhering to the core values that it had before the war and supporting those at the very bottom?
Again just to stress, a genuine question!