• Donate
  • Login
Saturday, June 20, 2026
  • Login
  • Register
Canary
Cart / £0.00

No products in the basket.

MEDIA THAT DISRUPTS
  • UK
  • Global
  • Opinion
  • Skwawkbox
  • Manage Subscription
  • Support
  • Features
    • Health
    • Environment
    • Science
    • Feature
    • Sport & Gaming
    • Lifestyle
    • Tech
    • Business
    • Money
    • Travel
    • Property
    • Food
    • Media
  • SHOP
No Result
View All Result
MANAGE SUBSCRIPTION
SUPPORT
  • UK
  • Global
  • Opinion
  • Skwawkbox
  • Manage Subscription
  • Support
  • Features
    • Health
    • Environment
    • Science
    • Feature
    • Sport & Gaming
    • Lifestyle
    • Tech
    • Business
    • Money
    • Travel
    • Property
    • Food
    • Media
  • SHOP
No Result
View All Result
Canary
No Result
View All Result
  • Editorial
  • Explainer
  • Global
  • Opinion
  • Environment
  • Feature
  • Food
  • Health
  • Science
  • Skwawkbox
  • UK

Guardian pushes race-baiting over the Census – then changes the article

Steve Topple by Steve Topple
29 November 2022
in Trending, UK
Reading Time: 4 mins read
170 3
A A
2
Home Trending
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on BlueskyShare via WhatsAppShare via TelegramShare on Threads

The results of the Census 2021 continue to come in. However, on Tuesday 29 November, the latest release caused gammon across the UK to collectively lose their minds – helped along by the Guardian, which then changed its article after it was published.

Census: cue moral outrage from the right wing

As Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported, for the first time, less than half of the population in England and Wales identifies as Christian. This was according to census data released Tuesday. The 10-yearly census carried out in 2021 showed ‘no religion’ was the second most common response after Christian, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) said. Data for Scotland and Northern Ireland is released separately. The ONS added the religion question to the UK census in 2001. It remains voluntary to answer, but 94% of respondents did.

Some 27.5 million people in England and Wales, or 46.2%, described themselves as Christian This was down 13.1 percentage points from 2011. ‘No religion’ rose by 12 percentage points to 37.2%, or 22.2 million, while people describing themselves as Muslim stood at 3.9 million, or 6.5% of the population, up 1.6 percentage points. The next most common responses were Hindu (one million) and Sikh (524,000), while Buddhists overtook Jewish people (273,000 to 271,000).

Of course, the real story here is that more and more people are not religious. However, not to let the facts get in the way of an opportunity, right wingers used the Census as an opportunity to drop racist horseshit – with the Guardian aiding and abetting them.

Manipulating figures

The Guardian originally wrote that:

The census revealed a 5.5 million drop in the number of Christians and a 44% rise in the number of people following Islam.

It continued:

37.2% of people – 22.2 million – declared they had “no religion”, the second most common response after Christian. It means that over the past 20 years the proportion of people reporting no religion has soared from 14.8%.

However, the Guardian was intentionally mixing up its measurements:

"The census revealed a 5.5 million drop in the number of Christians and a 44% rise in the number of people following Islam." Absolute numbers for the first value and a percentage change for the second. Tabloid tactics, @guardian.https://t.co/UakeOjG4f7

— Danny Kodicek (@DannyKodicek) November 29, 2022

It should have used either the changes in the number of people or the changes in the percentages. Instead, the Guardian used the percentage change for Muslims to make it look huge. Clearly, editors realised the pushback their biased reporting would receive – as the article was changed on the same day. It now uses the same measurements for both statistics.

However, the Guardian doubled down on the race-baiting with its dire takes on ethnicity figures.

Guardian: jumping on ethnicity

AFP reported that the ONS found the number of people in England and Wales identifying their ethnic group as white had fallen by around 500,000 since 2011. This went down from from 86% to 81.7%. The proportion identifying as white and from the British Isles stood at 74.4%, down six points from 2011. However, the ONS noted that respondents could also choose from more options than in 2011, encouraging them to list other identities.

The second most common ethnic group after white was “Asian, Asian British or Asian Welsh” at 9.3%, up from 7.5% a decade ago. Within that group, most respondents identified their family heritage as Indian, followed by Pakistani, “other Asian”, Bangladeshi, and Chinese. The next largest ethnic group was the African, followed by Caribbean.

Of course, the Guardian jumped on this. It said that places where more Black and brown people lived were called “minority majorities”:

Ushering in a new age of city-wide “super diversity”, the ONS data showed 59.1% of the people of Leicester are now from ethnic minority groups, a big change since 1991, when black and minority ethnic people made up just over a quarter of the city’s residents.

The term “super diversity” is problematic for several reasons.

Race-baiting

As professor of applied linguistics Sinfree Makoni wrote, he was:

extremely uncomfortable with the notion of diversity when used to refer to ‘mass movements’ for three main reasons. First, writing from a vantage perspective of being an immigrant in a rural university which seeks to bring to fruition diversity, I keep asking myself whether it is not the case that diversity… is a version of a description of reality that can only be advocated by those who are part of the powerful elite, such as researchers.

Second, those of us who have spent most of our professional lives outside our countries of origin find that diversity may be extremely uncomfortable, because it is typically others who do so. It is the powerful who celebrate the notion of diversity; those of us from other parts of the world feel the idea of diversity is a careful concealment of power differences…

Third, I find it disconcerting, to say the least, to have an open celebration of diversity in societies marked by violent xenophobia, such as South Africa… Furthermore, diversity stresses the differences between individuals, languages, groups, etc. Whether we are diverse or not depends on the power of the social microscope being used.

So, not only did the Guardian prop up right-wing narratives about, for example, “invasions” of refugees – it then did what the liberal media do so well, and covered its tracks by spinning it as “super diversity”. For a supposedly left-wing outlet, it does a remarkably good job of sowing the seeds of division and racism for the right wing.

Featured image via the Guardian – screengrab

Additional reporting by Agence France-Presse (AFP)

Tags: anti-BlacknessIslamophobiaracism
Share128Tweet80ShareSendShareShare
Previous Post

30 November is super strike Wednesday

Next Post

UK wildlife crime report points to disgraceful institutional failures

Next Post
Fox and magpie on grass

UK wildlife crime report points to disgraceful institutional failures

A protest in Iran

Iran authorities have killed nearly 500 protesters since September

The Royal Courts of Justice and the DWP logo

DWP court case could see millions get £1,500 payments

A Royal Mail sorting office

Royal Mail 'Christmas meltdown' incoming as letters 'stack up'

Ocean artwork with whale tail emerging from ocean made up of plastic waste

Campaigners warn against corporate capture of UN plastic treaty talks

Comments 2

  1. Gnu says:
    4 years ago

    Soulless neoliberals will do as soulless neolibs do.

    The Grundiags last Journalism was publishing Wikileaks.

    And then America’s dictatorship revealed itself, and took charge.

    Reply
  2. Airlane1979 says:
    4 years ago

    Should we celebrate because the UK has its most ethnically diverse government in its history? As Professor Makoni said, “…the idea of diversity is a careful concealment of power differences”. Nothing has changed apart from the skin colour. Sure, it’s nice that non-white capitalists and neoliberals get their own opportunities to extract wealth from the working class of all ethnic categories. But it would be nicer if those capitalists and neoliberals were dragged from power and replaced with a socialist government of that working class.

    Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Katie Hopkins being booed out of a pub
Trending

Racist Katie Hopkins booed out of British pub

by Willem Moore
20 June 2026
Green Party
Trending

Green mayor hopeful to save Manchester from ‘Reform disaster’

by Willem Moore
20 June 2026
Reform Sarah Pochin and Thangam Debbonaire
Trending

Reform’s Pochin laughs when questioned on domestic abuse scandal

by Willem Moore
20 June 2026
Green Party Greater Manchester mayor candidate Geraldine Coggins
Trending

Greens announce Greater Manchester mayor candidate

by Willem Moore
20 June 2026
Euro-Med Monitor
Global

Euro-Med Monitor closes offices after threats by Israeli occupation

by Charlie Jaay
20 June 2026

The Canary
PO Box 71199
LONDON
SE20 9EX

Canary Media Ltd – registered in England. Company registration number 09788095.

For guest posting, contact [email protected]

For other enquiries, contact: [email protected]

Complaints and Corrections

About the Canary

Meet the Team

© Canary Media Ltd 2026, all rights reserved | Website by Monster | Hosted by Krystal | Privacy Settings

Ok

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
  • UK
  • Global
  • Opinion
  • Skwawkbox
  • Manage Subscription
  • Support
  • Features
    • Health
    • Environment
    • Science
    • Feature
    • Sport & Gaming
    • Lifestyle
    • Tech
    • Business
    • Money
    • Travel
    • Property
    • Food
    • Media
  • SHOP
  • Login
  • Sign Up
  • Cart