I'm happy to see in the latest ComRes survey for the BBC Daily Politics Show that the working class are the most anti-higher taxation.
According to the survey, those defined as lower middle class professionals are 29% in favour of higher taxes to get through the recession, and 68% are against this. Of the semi-skilled and unskilled manual workers, pensioners and those on benefits, 28% favoured higher taxes, and 66% were against it.
Most significantly, though, is that those in the C2 social category - skilled manual workers, are 74% opposed to higher taxation. These are the people who voted Conservative en masse in 1970, because they supported Enoch Powell, and again in 1979, sick at the state of the nation.
However, just because they are against higher taxation does not mean they will vote Conservative, let alone be actively Tory. Margaret Thatcher, and Lord Tebbit, and many others, attracted these voters. There isn't anyone in today's shadow Cabinet who can attract these votes back, and unfortunately, David Cameron's vote will suffer as a result. Put more working class people in the Cabinet, and this would go some way. At least someone with an Estuary accent would be better than the current hegemony of Notting Hill public schoolboys.
Unlike Labour and the laughably hypocritical LibDems, I don't think this makes the shadow Cabinet unfit for government, or less able to connect with people. Quite the opposite, it is because of their upper middle class backgrounds, not in spite of them, that they connect to people - they have more pressure to seem more "in touch". The Labour backbenches, on the other hand, are full of working class and middle class people who think that just because they come from an area, they somehow deserve unfaltering commitment, or to be thought of as "one of the people".
Is the Tory lead really just three points?
6 hours ago



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