Now this week, Lord Sewell is about to say what we can all see happening. Nothing is improving for white working class which is causing anger and division. Five years ago, Boris Johnson asked Lord Sewell to chair an inquiry with 10 commissioners looking into race and ethnic disparities. This was after the Black Lives Matter movement. Remember that? Ugh. I can still remember being brandished a coconut for daring to say the term Black Lives Matter is divisive, and it should be All Lives Matter. TRENDING Stories Videos Your Say I was treated like an outlier by many on the left for daring to perceive people as equal. Ridiculous. But what is interesting about this particular inquiry is that nine out of the 10 commissioners on it were from ethnic minorities, and they found that the group that performed the worst were the white working class. So the worst inequalities or disparities were not driven by the colour of someone's skin, but in fact they were driven by class, geography and family stability. This is actually what made the difference. So, contrary to the narrative that is persistently perpetuated by those who seem to find racism at the root of practically everything, or DEI initiatives which neglect the white working class... Or things like critical race theory, which are supported by the woke liberal left who see the white man as the oppressor. It would appear that this inquiry, some five years ago, proved that race was not the driver for success. Even Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson admitted last year that the outcomes of white working class pupils was a national disgrace, and she promised to make this a priority. LATEST GB NEWS HEADLINES: Keir Starmer to hold emergency Cobra meeting after Iran threatens UK with chilling warning Donald Trump says he's 'glad' Robert Mueller is dead after accusing him of 'hurting innocent people' Greens talk scrapping primary school homework as part of controversial education overhaul proposal So it's been five years since that report and Lord Sewell pointed out that nothing has changed, he said. Our report set out clearly that racism still persists and we confront it wherever it is found. But we also said we also said something else. The main drivers of unequal outcomes are class geography and family stability, not race alone. He went on to say: "White working class boys from the poorest times are still stuck at the bottom of the class. Our warnings were not listened to. "If we are serious about the opportunity, we have to stop arguing about language and start delivering change in the places that need it most." It's a bit like the movie Trading Places. Remember that one with Eddie Murphy and Dan Aykroyd? They swapped places and pretty much became the other. Colour was not relevant. So it should come as no surprise that when you disadvantage one group of people, for whatever reason, that they start to fail and builds. And it's also quite clear that when you disadvantage people based on the colour of their skin, this is called apartheid. And in giving advantage based on the colour of skin, you actually create the very thing you are trying to prevent: racism. Our Standards: The GB News Editorial Charter