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Chronic pain and ravaged mental health: this is the brutal reality of Britain’s new working class

15 31
22.11.2024

If journalists visit Mansfield at all these days, they come for one thing: the cliches. They want the market town where 70% backed Brexit, the “red wall” seat that booted out its Labour MP in 2017 for a private-school boy who called for the poor to be sterilised. They want colliery brass bands, Nigel Farage’s beery grin and vox pops about stopping the boats. And they’re not alone. For social scientists and thinktankers, Mansfield and its ring of former mining villages make up a petri dish of “left-behind” England, of isolation and anger and impoverishment. They’re part of that other England, which performs the same role in our politics as the corrections and clarifications column in a daily broadsheet, sweeping up stray mishaps and howlers so as to reassure readers that the rest is true. Yes, there are losers in the Britain of the 2020s – many, many losers – but the model works.

Even as the mines closed and the factories shut, Margaret Thatcher as good as guaranteed a jobs boom was on its way. When none came, Tony Blair pledged regeneration. Just outside Mansfield, the New Labour government ploughed £38m of taxpayer money into an old coalmine to attract a buyer. After a company bought the site, the regional development agency was jubilant. It put out a press release promising the new owner would “create up to 2,500 jobs – more than existed at the time when [the] colliery was operating at full capacity”.

The new owner was Sports Direct, and its Shirebrook site created some of Britain’s worst jobs. In 2015, Locals called it “the gulag”; MPs ruled staff were “not treated as humans”. Terrified of missing her shift, one employee gave birth in a warehouse toilet, severing the umbilical cord with a box cutter.

Daubed across the front pages and decried in Westminster, it was the kind of scandal from which you might think no business could, or should, recover. Yet nearly 10 years later, Sports Direct billionaire Mike Ashley is even richer, and the Shirebrook complex is booming. I stood outside as the shifts changed just after 2pm and burly men ran past to clock in on time. To clear the site security,........

© The Guardian


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