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Keir Starmer's definition of working class

(411 Posts)
M0nica Wed 19-Jun-24 07:51:23

If ever I needed proof that class definitions are nonsense and all that matters is how much money you earn/have saved, then Keir Starmer's latest pronouncement on what is working class is the absolute proof.

According to the Times this morning he defined working class as those who cannot afford to write a cheque when they get into trouble

This definition will exclude almost all those traditionally considered 'working class', builders, tradesmen, many factory and assembly line workers, railway men. It will include many of those past retirement age, including many women, probably mostly over 80, who may never have worked since they married.

It will include all the financially inept, but not include many on small salaries who manage a small income with the skill of the Governor of the Bank of England.

Dickens Sun 23-Jun-24 11:22:21

Mollygo

Yes, but I thought you actually had plans about how that could be made to work, which is why I asked those questions.

When my children first went to school, I, like many today, couldn’t get a job which didn’t involve paying child care costs, which, in addition to tax and deductions would have made it hardly worth working. On DH’s earnings alone, plus family allowance, we just scraped by, but I stayed at home.
Paying tax on my non earnings at that time would have made life impossible, but we weren’t even poor enough to get milk tokens.
Without the nitty gritty mentioned by Dickens, I didn’t see how you would decide how those not on benefits who didn’t have a job, would be assessed for the contribution they needed to make.

I understand that as a matter of principle everyone should contribute but I don’t see how it would be implemented fairly.
Last time a per adult capita was introduced, it brought the government down.

I understand that as a matter of principle everyone should contribute but I don’t see how it would be implemented fairly.

That's the problem.

The 'wealthy' would (reluctantly) pay-up.

The 'poor', not having that option, would be the ones dragooned into voluntary work. Probably equally reluctantly.

Wealthy and poor being relative terms here.

... and, let's not forget, well-off people who are not obliged to work very often are quite active anyway in the community.

I don't know how it is in other communities but the lady opposite me is very comfortable and her working life ended when she married her husband who has a very well-paid job. Ever since I've lived here I've been aware of how much involved she is in the local community. I won't bore people with a list of what she does, but she does devote quite a fair amount of time to voluntary work both at a local and national level. On a personal level, she's always available for those who are housebound, running errands for them, checking up on them, etc, etc. I don't think she's unique, I'm sure a lot of well off people 'give back' to society.

Pammie1 Sun 23-Jun-24 11:29:19

Sago

His father was a toolmaker.

No. He owned the factory.

Dickens Sun 23-Jun-24 12:33:16

Oreo

Casdon

We all have different opinions, and as long as everybody understands the trade offs, okay. In my eyes a society where one partner is entitled to stay at home if the other earns a lot of money, but not otherwise, stinks.

That’s a very curious view I must say.
Women who don’t have to work i.e their partner/ husband earns enough to keep them, have that choice.Women who have a partner/ husband who earns enough to keep them both but want to work, that’s their choice too.If earning a lot they pay more taxes.
Women who have to work i.e me, also pay tax, tho a low-ish amount.
You can’t tax women ( or men) who don’t earn anything themselves.

That’s a very curious view I must say.

It is a bit.

If one individual earns a lot of money, he or she will also pay a lot of tax on it.

His or her net income is then 'available' to be spent (after bills are paid) in whatever way the earner chooses.

If he or she decides to spend their income on 'keeping' their spouse or partner, that is their choice.

... unless we are going to start making laws about what an individual is allowed to spend their income on? Which would be unthinkable IMO.

It may not seem very 'fair' - but the answer is not to attempt to somehow 'ban' it, but to make sure that everyone has a decent income for the work they do so they can also have a fair crack at the whip.

Also, a couple may decide to cut their budget, to live frugally, on one income, so that one partner can remain in the home - for whatever reason, which is no one else's business anyway. Is that wrong? Should they not be allowed to do that?

And can I just say that - without reference to any facts or statistics (I don't have the time) - is it not the case that, barring obviously some exceptions, the majority of women do at some point in their lives, work outside the home? During which time they will pay taxes and national insurance. Considering that it is largely women doing the grunt work of raising children and keeping the home ticking over so that the 'breadwinner' functions, the children are properly cared for and can become well-rounded, stable, future workers and tax-payers, all without recourse on the State... is that not enough?

As a single-parent working full-time, I can truthfully say I never begrudged those women who were in a position to stay at home. I occasionally envied them, but not in any malicious way. I was just determined to make the most of any opportunities that came my way, and work my way up the ladder so that life would become more comfortable.

However, I did have a good, well-paying job which was secure (though it was nothing special, just a common or garden secretarial one). I also had reasonably priced rented accommodation with a secure tenancy agreement, and a child-minder whose charges I could afford out of my one wage packet. And transport costs were also relatively reasonable, too.

... and that is what the problem is now. Well paid secure jobs are difficult to find, rented accommodation is hugely expensive, child-care costs are sometimes unaffordable, and travel is enormously expensive. And that is what needs addressing rather than debating whether it's right or wrong for one partner to pay for the upkeep of another.

Dickens Sun 23-Jun-24 12:42:39

Pammie1

Sago

His father was a toolmaker.

No. He owned the factory.

The factory was a rented workshop on an industrial estate.

He was largely a one-man band. A self-employed tradesman.

How many more times...

I'm not over-enthused about Starmer, but this idea that his father owned a conventional factory full of busy toolmakers is nonsense.

In busy periods he may well have had to employ extra hands, who knows, but he did not "own a factory" in the sense that people normally associate with 'factory owners'.

Doodledog Sun 23-Jun-24 13:38:55

Glorianny

Doodledog perhaps one solution to the problem would be what is usually known as "Wages for Housework" but is actually the idea that anyone engaging in caring for family members should be paid a wage. Thus those with paid partners but with home responsibilities would pay their own tax and insurance. There's actually an organisation campaigning for this en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wages_for_housework#Relation_with_Global_Women's_Strike

So long as it recognises the fact that housework is done by those who work, too grin.

So often this debate becomes unnecessarily polarised as there is a (very strange IMO) assumption that workers (of both sexes) don't run homes and bring up children - of course they do - they just do it as well as going to work. Terms like 'full-time mother' are designed to belittle those who work, as the suggestion is that those who work are somehow 'part-time mothers', and there is never any mention of fathers who work being 'part-time'.

The vast majority of workers don't put their children on boarding school or get a full-time nanny and live entirely separate lives as captains of industry. They drop them off at school, a childminder or breakfast club, go to work, pick them up again after school or after-school club and go home to make dinner, clean the house, help with homework etc. Juggling 'life admin', doing the shopping, visiting elderly relatives and all the other things that make up that stage of life are done in the evenings and at weekends, around getting children to their playdates and hobby groups etc.

If those who have all day to do all of those things and are not contributing tax or producing goods or services should get paid for keeping their own house clean, how much extra should go to those who do all of this on top of going to work? And who would ensure that the standards of housework were up to scratch?

I think that caring for a sick or disabled person is different, however, and there should absolutely be a 'wage' for doing that.

Lexisgranny Sun 23-Jun-24 14:06:18

I am afraid that Starmer senior would beg to differ Dickens. Writing about his son in an article in volume 18 issue 3 of the Barn Theatre news printed in August 2014, he said that prior to going to university Keir took a year off, “the next six months were spent in my factory operating a production machine.”

Whether some prefer to regard it as a workshop, this was obviously not how his father saw it. The article covered the period from when he went to primary school until he was knighted.

Wyllow3 Sun 23-Jun-24 14:25:17

Anyone else remember in the Women's Movement in the 1970's discussions around "Wages for Housework? Not a lot new under the sun. It wasn't just for housework however, it included all caring roles that meant someone needed to be at home.

Mamie Sun 23-Jun-24 14:45:31

Lexisgranny

I am afraid that Starmer senior would beg to differ Dickens. Writing about his son in an article in volume 18 issue 3 of the Barn Theatre news printed in August 2014, he said that prior to going to university Keir took a year off, “the next six months were spent in my factory operating a production machine.”

Whether some prefer to regard it as a workshop, this was obviously not how his father saw it. The article covered the period from when he went to primary school until he was knighted.

You must have missed my post before!
Mamie
Just checked the Tom Baldwin biography, Chapter 2 and it describes Rodney Starmer working alone in his factory, based in an old canteen. Before that he worked in other people's factories in South London and Caterham, but wanted to work nearer to home to care for his wife. Keir's mother was not able to work for much of his childhood, she had Still's Disease and became increasingly disabled. The impact on his childhood is very clear in this and other sources.
I realise people may not find this very interesting or relevant, but I do think facts matter.
Keir did work for his father before going to university.

Doodledog Sun 23-Jun-24 14:45:44

I think that carers get a poor deal. A friend of mine looked after his mum for years. He gave up a decent job to do it, and was paid attendance allowance (or similar) which was very meagre. He had no free time, as his mum had dementia and couldn't be left. As he wasn't working, he lost out on pension contributions as well as salary, and was working 24 hours a day, doing personal care as well as keeping the house going and keeping his mother clean and safe, going to medical appointments etc.

When his mum died, he had three weeks before having to start applying for work, or his benefits would be cut. Three weeks! After years of saving the state a fortune in care. He had just had the funeral, and was barely back on his feet after that.

It's disgraceful, and he's far from alone in being treated like that. It's not remotely the same as having healthy school aged children and staying at home when they are at school.

Mamie Sun 23-Jun-24 15:04:25

And to bring it back to Keir Starmer Doodledog, it is very clear that caring for his disabled mother and carrying much of the weight of the family on his shoulders, has shaped his character. The biography is an excellent read.

Doodledog Sun 23-Jun-24 15:24:39

Mamie

And to bring it back to Keir Starmer Doodledog, it is very clear that caring for his disabled mother and carrying much of the weight of the family on his shoulders, has shaped his character. The biography is an excellent read.

Thanks - I'll look it up. I agree that KS comes over as caring and that there is no comparison between his background and that of Rishi Sunak.

Sorry for diversion. I'm very much in and out today.

I think that referring to a workshop as a 'factory' is the sort of thing many people do - akin to calling a cupboard a pantry, or other things I can't bring to mind just now. Small affectations, really. It's very human, and if KS has decided to be less affected in his description, so what? those who want to dig at him would do so whatever he said - it's no wonder he tries to say as little as possible.

maddyone Sun 23-Jun-24 16:21:25

I agree that carers should be paid more, and I think they are eligible, like stay at home parents, to have their NI contributions paid.
That doesn’t mean that I think parents who choose to stay at home should be forced to either work, or do voluntary work. That’s completely unacceptable in my opinion.

Lexisgranny Sun 23-Jun-24 16:23:51

Actually I was pointing out that Rod Starmer was proud enough of his business to call it a factory, and it seemed a bit petty to downgrade it to a workshop.

Dickens Sun 23-Jun-24 16:29:37

Doodledog

I think that referring to a workshop as a 'factory' is the sort of thing many people do - akin to calling a cupboard a pantry, or other things I can't bring to mind just now. Small affectations, really. It's very human, and if KS has decided to be less affected in his description, so what? those who want to dig at him would do so whatever he said - it's no wonder he tries to say as little as possible.

Well quite.

When I think of anyone owning a factory - I imagine those huge buildings that used to sit alongside the Great West Road and in which I worked occasionally, sitting in a tiny office partitioned off from a large factory floor with machinery humming, banging and rattling away outside.

I don't think Starmer Senior's 'factory' was anything like that.

But, it's essential for his opponents to paint him and Keir as champagne socialists in order to dent his credibility right from the offset.

M0nica Sun 23-Jun-24 17:38:12

I do not think I have ever confused a workshop with a factory.

A worksshop is a place where one person works making something, might possibly stretch to 2 or 3. Over that it is a factory.

There have always been a plethors of small factories all over the place in small industrial estates all over the country and any country anywhere.

Anniebach Sun 23-Jun-24 17:50:58

In workshops one repairs, in factories one assembles

MissAdventure Sun 23-Jun-24 17:51:56

When is a workshop not a workshop?

When Keir Starmers dad owns it...

Mamie Sun 23-Jun-24 18:01:03

MissAdventure

When is a workshop not a workshop?

When Keir Starmers dad owns it...

I am pretty sure he rented it....

JudyBloom Sun 23-Jun-24 18:12:12

I've never cared for the definitions of class and putting people in boxes. If you're earning money you are working, but Class is more about the person, regardless of how much money they earn. No man is an island and we all need each other's expertise in different fields, it's just wrong to define people by how much money they earn.

MissAdventure Sun 23-Jun-24 18:49:56

Ah, I didn't know that, Mamie.
It won't matter to me when I put my cross. smile

Anniebach Sun 23-Jun-24 18:49:58

Starmer was asked a question about class, O/P made error or
misheard

Wyllow3 Sun 23-Jun-24 18:59:46

Yes - Keir Starmer never used the word class he said "working people", O/P was picked up on this.

Pammie1 Sun 23-Jun-24 19:01:22

Dickens

Pammie1

Sago

His father was a toolmaker.

No. He owned the factory.

The factory was a rented workshop on an industrial estate.

He was largely a one-man band. A self-employed tradesman.

How many more times...

I'm not over-enthused about Starmer, but this idea that his father owned a conventional factory full of busy toolmakers is nonsense.

In busy periods he may well have had to employ extra hands, who knows, but he did not "own a factory" in the sense that people normally associate with 'factory owners'.

So why did his father refer to it as ‘my factory’ ?

Dickens Sun 23-Jun-24 19:05:36

Quite a few people are saying he "owned" the factory - his own factory.

Which is not the same as renting a workshop. And if you rent it, whatever it is, you don't own it!

Dickens Sun 23-Jun-24 19:11:52

Pammie1

Dickens

Pammie1

Sago

His father was a toolmaker.

No. He owned the factory.

The factory was a rented workshop on an industrial estate.

He was largely a one-man band. A self-employed tradesman.

How many more times...

I'm not over-enthused about Starmer, but this idea that his father owned a conventional factory full of busy toolmakers is nonsense.

In busy periods he may well have had to employ extra hands, who knows, but he did not "own a factory" in the sense that people normally associate with 'factory owners'.

So why did his father refer to it as ‘my factory’ ?

So why did his father refer to it as ‘my factory’ ?

No idea.

Maybe in the same way as my son used to say, "I'm going to my studio... he rented a small workshop on an island on the Thames.

He didn't make anything in it, just a loud racket, as he used it as a recording studio.