
The so-called culture wars and the âanti-wokeâ agenda is pitting working class communities against each other, according to a new report.
Research from The Fabian Society claims that rows over issues such as racial equality and cancel culture are stoked by politicians, media outlets and social media platforms rather than reflecting actual attitude divides amongst the public.
And the Labour-affiliated think tank said there were lessons for the left and right to prevent Britain from becoming as fractured as the US.
The groupâs analysis found that clashes about tradition and identity are usually instigated by those seeking political, personal or commercial gain.
And that while these âculture warsâ may result in significant public divides, the report finds this only happens after controversies are whipped up by the âpedlarsâ of culture wars, the study found.

Kirsty McNeill, co-author of the report, said: âThe temptations for all political parties are clear.
âRiling up a base and pointing it at an imagined enemy is much easier than doing the hard yards involved in meeting the Prime Ministerâs ambition to âlevel upâ.
âEqually, ignoring rivalsâ attempts to sow division wonât help Keir Starmer assemble a broad and diverse coalition to back his vision of a fairer country.
âThe public deserves better than fabricated fights.â
Roger Harding the reportâs second co-author, added: âCulture war pedlars often use contrived stories to pit working-class communities against one another and caricature movements for racial and LGBT equality.
âWe need to have the confidence to call out what they are doing so we can build on the public demand â especially amongst working-class people up and down the country â for action on jobs, climate change and building a better future for the next generation.â
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The so-called culture wars have been played out over a number of controversies in recent years, from whether Rule Britannia should be played at the end of the Proms, to supposed calls to have the film Grease âcancelledâ.
These fake controversies create division between people with shared economic needs
Andrew Harrop, Fabian Society general secretary
Rows have also erupted over the Black Lives Matter movement, the England football team taking the knee before matches, and over LGBT+ rights.
Culture Secretary Oliver Dowden told the Museum of the Home in Shoreditch, east London, it must âretain and explainâ its controversial statue of slave trader Robert Geffrye after a petition was launched calling for its removal.
Education Secretary Gavin Williamson criticised a group of Oxford students who reportedly voted to remove a picture of the Queen from their common room due to the monarchyâs links with colonialism.
Last month, elections expert Professor Sir John Curtice claimed that the Conservative Party are seeking to âtap intoâ a wider set of values held by those who voted to leave the EU in 2016 through an âanti-woke agendaâ.
The Fabian Society report authors conclude these rows are fuelled by politicians looking to caricature movements for equality, by commentators who personally profit from controversy and by media and social media platforms who see commercial gain in the clicks and coverage the outrage generates.
Andrew Harrop, general secretary of the Fabian Society, said: âIt will not be easy to end the culture wars which have become a valuable tool for cynics on the right.
âThese fake controversies create division between people with shared economic needs and they distract the public from a low tax, low regulation, libertarian worldview that few in Britain support.
âProgressives of all stripes â and the Labour Party in particular â must focus their energy not on winning culture wars, but on calling them out, building bridges and ending these divisive battles.â