Non-white leadership of UK has just sort of happened

First Minister of Wales Vaughan Gething in the stands as Wales play Finland at football. PHOTO:...
First Minister of Wales Vaughan Gething in the stands as Wales play Finland at football. PHOTO: REUTERS
Nobody planned it, hardly anybody realised it was happening, and suddenly there it was: done.

In the space of less than two years, the entire senior leadership of Great Britain has become non-white.

I am choosing my words carefully here, because the country as a whole is called the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. It contains four nations, and one of them, Northern Ireland, still has a white person running the government.

She is a Catholic woman, which is a double first, but Michelle O’Neill is indisputably white.

However, on the island of Great Britain (England, Wales and Scotland), it has been a clean sweep.

Humza Yousaf, a Muslim born in Scotland of Punjabi descent, succeeded Nicola Sturgeon as the leader of the Scottish National Party just a year ago.

Since the SNP is the governing party in Scotland, that automatically made him first minister, too. (First minister is the title of heads of government in the devolved nations.)

Six months before that Rishi Sunak, a Hindu of Indian heritage born in Southampton, became the prime minister of the whole country. (England contains more than four-fifths of the entire UK population but it does not have an exclusive national government of its own, so Sunak is all England has by way of a national leader.)

Finally, late last week, Vaughan Gething, born in Zambia 50 years ago to a Zambian mother and a Welsh father and brought to Wales at the age of 2, became the First Minister of Wales. Game set, and match.

The cherry atop that cake is the fact that the Mayor of London since 2016 has been Sadiq Khan, a Muslim Londoner of Pakistani heritage.

London contains about a fifth of the British population, and Khan is about to be re-elected to a third term by a large majority.

Obviously, there is an element of coincidence in all this. Non-white people make up only 18% of the UK population, so there may never again be four non-white people in these four posts at the same time.

But it is striking that hardly anybody noticed until the process was nearly complete — and when it did happen, almost nobody was upset.

It is hard to explain why this has happened in the UK, because in most respects it is a political disaster area.

The Conservative government led by Sunak knows in its heart that it is going to lose the forthcoming national election by a landslide. Thrashing around in despair, some of the party’s leading members have turned very nasty indeed.

The party’s former deputy chairman, Lee Anderson, gave a splendid example of that last month: "I don’t actually believe that the Islamists have got control of our country," he said, "but what I do believe is they’ve got control of Khan, and they’ve got control of London. Khan has given our capital city away to his mates."

Some of Anderson’s fellow Conservatives defend him by saying that he is not racist, just Islamophobic, as if that excused his behaviour.

In the end he was expelled from the party, but the question remains: how can a party with people like that in it preside over a country that is undergoing such a radical transformation? For Anderson is certainly not alone.

Last week it was revealed that the Conservative Party’s biggest donor, Frank Hester, had declared his undying hatred of Diane Abbott, who 37 years ago was the first black woman elected to the UK parliament.

She’s still in Parliament, and Hester cannot stand her: "You just see Diane Abbott on the TV and you’re just like, I hate, you just want to hate all black women because she’s there ... I think she should be shot."

This caused much outrage and uproar, of course.

Sunak eventually said that Hester was "racist and wrong" — but refused to reject Hester’s money (about $US12 million or $NZ19.9m last year and already another $US6 million this year) because it amounts to about one-quarter of all donations to the Conservative Party and there is a national election later this year.

And by the way, Abbott herself is suspended by the Labour Party for saying that Jewish, Irish and Traveller people are not subject to racism "all their lives", whereas black people are. (No, I do not want to enter that minefield, either.)

The UK has not turned into a colour-blind paradise where everybody lives happily ever after. Far from it.

The claim that it is the best (or rather, the least bad) place to be a black person in Europe may be correct, but that is hollow praise.

Nevertheless, this really is a remarkable moment, and all the more so for the fact that it was not some officially ordained goal or programme.

It just sort of happened.

 - Gwynne Dyer is an independent London journalist.