Pankaj Mishra, Columnist

What’s Not on Sunak’s To-Do List? Ending Racism

The new British prime minister’s remarkable personal story doesn’t herald general social progress any more than Barack Obama’s election did in the US.

Model minority.

Photographer: Leon Neal/Getty Images

Lock
This article is for subscribers only.

Two weeks ago, the United Kingdom was thrown into economic chaos by Kwasi Kwarteng, its first Black chancellor of the Exchequer. A floundering Tory party has now tasked Rishi Sunak, the UK’s first Brown prime minister, to clean up the mess. But racial progress, let alone political and economic stability, is not in sight yet.

Sunak’s biography (he moved straight from Oxford to Goldman Sachs and then Stanford University and hedge funds) belongs quintessentially to the rarefied world of metropolitan globalization. What is remarkable about Sunak and Kwarteng, the Eton-educated son of Ghanaian immigrants, is that they entered a gilded global class with a swiftness and assurance that would have been inconceivable to those who first arrived in Britain from its former colonies in the 1950s and 1960s.