Boris Johnson has appointed a Downing Street aide who railed against multiculturalism and said institutional racism was a myth to lead a commission on racial equality.
Munira Mirza, director of the Downing Street policy unit who also worked for Mr Johnson while he was Mayor of London, said it was not racism but “anti-racist lobby groups” to blame for some of the problems ethnic minorities faced.
She has also called for the government to “dismantle the countless diversity policies that encourage people to see everything through the prism of racial difference”.
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The prime minister this week announced a “cross-governmental commission” to look at all aspects of racial inequality in the UK in the wake of global Black Lives Matter protests.
Mr Johnson said there was “much more that we need to do” to combat racism, though he also urged ethnic minorities to consider the progress that had been made.
But the commission will reportedly be led by Ms Mirza, who has written dozens of controversial articles for fringe right-wing website Spiked Online, in some of which she lays out her views on race.
In one piece from September 2017 the aide attacks the findings of a previous racial equality review by Labour MP David Lammy and argued that it was wrong to point the finger at institutional racism.
In the article she suggested that “the current accusations of institutional racism by lobbyists and activists” were “a perception more than a reality” and that the accusations of racism themselves led to worse outcomes for people from ethnic minorities, particularly in the justice system.
“When anti-racist lobby groups criticise the authorities for their racism, it is not surprising that BAME communities start to believe they cannot trust their own professional solicitors,” she argued. “They then make decisions that might harm their chances in the justice system.”
In another 2017 article, this time for the Spectator, she claimed that “anti-racism is becoming weaponised across the political spectrum”.
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The Tory insider has also slammed the “race-relations industry”, writing in another Spiked Online article from 2006: “The ‘race relations industry’ has expanded massively on the back of government policies, legislation and funding.
“Most public services – housing, healthcare, arts and cultural provision, voluntary support, public broadcasting, and policing – have strategies to accommodate the supposedly different needs of ethnic users. Many organisations now have targets to ensure they are employing enough ethnic minorities.
She argued: “A major step towards the universalist approach would be to dismantle the countless diversity policies that encourage people to see everything through the prism of racial difference.


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An aerial photo made with a drone shows a large group gathered in Union Park to protest the arrest of George Floyd, who later died in police custody, in Chicago, Illinois
EPA

2/21
A large group marching and chanting in Chicago, Illinois
EPA/Tannen Maury

3/21
Protesters gather along the steps of the Philadelphia Art Museum and Eakins Oval during a protest
AP

4/21
Demonstrators try to block a freeway during a protest against the death in Minneapolis police custody of George Floyd, in the Manhattan borough of New York City, New York
REUTERS

5/21
Thousands of demonstrators march across the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco, California
REUTERS

6/21
Demonstrators gather at Black Lives Matter Plaza in Washington
REUTERS

7/21
Demonstrators march down Flatbush Avenue toward the Manhattan Bridge chanting slogans
REUTERS

8/21
Protesters take part in a demonstration to protest in support of the George Floyd protests in the United States, and also to commemorate a similar circumstance in France when Adama Traore, a 24-year-old Frenchman was killed in 2016 by police, during an rally in Champ de Mars next to the Eiffel Tower in Paris
EPA

9/21
Demonstrators attend a protest in Berlin, Germany
FABRIZIO BENSCH/REUTERS

10/21
Demonstrators protest against the death in Minneapolis police custody of George Floyd, in Sydney
RON SHAMGAR via REUTERS

11/21
Demonstrators attend a Black Lives Matter protest to express solidarity with US protestors in Sydney
AFP via Getty Images

12/21
People take part in a Black Lives Matter protest rally in Manchester Piccadilly Gardens, UK
PA

13/21
People wearing masks hold placards during a protest march over the alleged police abuse of a Turkish man, in echoes of a Black Lives Matter protest, following the death of George Floyd who died in police custody in Minneapolis, in Tokyo
REUTERS/Issei Kato

14/21
Demonstrators attend a protest against police brutality in Frankfurt
REUTERS

15/21
Demonstrators attend a protest against police brutality at Alexanderplatz in Berlin, Germany
REUTERS

16/21
People stand in silence for eight minutes and 46 seconds in tribute to George Floyd during a protest against racism and police brutality in Frankfurt am Main, Germany
Getty Images

17/21
Thousands of people demonstrate in Cologne, Germany
AP

18/21
Demonstrators hold placards as they attend a protest march to the US Embassy in London
AFP via Getty Images

19/21
Demonstrators cross the River Thames via Vauxhall Bridge as they march to protest outside the US Embassy in London
AFP via Getty Images

20/21
Demonstrators gather for a protest against racism and police violence in Lisbon
AP

21/21
Boxer Anthony Joshua is seen on crutches with demonstrators in Watford, Britain
REUTERS

1/21
An aerial photo made with a drone shows a large group gathered in Union Park to protest the arrest of George Floyd, who later died in police custody, in Chicago, Illinois
EPA

2/21
A large group marching and chanting in Chicago, Illinois
EPA/Tannen Maury

3/21
Protesters gather along the steps of the Philadelphia Art Museum and Eakins Oval during a protest
AP

4/21
Demonstrators try to block a freeway during a protest against the death in Minneapolis police custody of George Floyd, in the Manhattan borough of New York City, New York
REUTERS

5/21
Thousands of demonstrators march across the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco, California
REUTERS

6/21
Demonstrators gather at Black Lives Matter Plaza in Washington
REUTERS

7/21
Demonstrators march down Flatbush Avenue toward the Manhattan Bridge chanting slogans
REUTERS

8/21
Protesters take part in a demonstration to protest in support of the George Floyd protests in the United States, and also to commemorate a similar circumstance in France when Adama Traore, a 24-year-old Frenchman was killed in 2016 by police, during an rally in Champ de Mars next to the Eiffel Tower in Paris
EPA

9/21
Demonstrators attend a protest in Berlin, Germany
FABRIZIO BENSCH/REUTERS

10/21
Demonstrators protest against the death in Minneapolis police custody of George Floyd, in Sydney
RON SHAMGAR via REUTERS

11/21
Demonstrators attend a Black Lives Matter protest to express solidarity with US protestors in Sydney
AFP via Getty Images

12/21
People take part in a Black Lives Matter protest rally in Manchester Piccadilly Gardens, UK
PA

13/21
People wearing masks hold placards during a protest march over the alleged police abuse of a Turkish man, in echoes of a Black Lives Matter protest, following the death of George Floyd who died in police custody in Minneapolis, in Tokyo
REUTERS/Issei Kato

14/21
Demonstrators attend a protest against police brutality in Frankfurt
REUTERS

15/21
Demonstrators attend a protest against police brutality at Alexanderplatz in Berlin, Germany
REUTERS

16/21
People stand in silence for eight minutes and 46 seconds in tribute to George Floyd during a protest against racism and police brutality in Frankfurt am Main, Germany
Getty Images

17/21
Thousands of people demonstrate in Cologne, Germany
AP

18/21
Demonstrators hold placards as they attend a protest march to the US Embassy in London
AFP via Getty Images

19/21
Demonstrators cross the River Thames via Vauxhall Bridge as they march to protest outside the US Embassy in London
AFP via Getty Images

20/21
Demonstrators gather for a protest against racism and police violence in Lisbon
AP

21/21
Boxer Anthony Joshua is seen on crutches with demonstrators in Watford, Britain
REUTERS
“We should get rid of ‘tick box’ measures that do nothing to address underlying inequality in areas like employment. And we should interrogate the claims of victimisation made by some organisations to get their slice of pie.”
The Institute for Race Relations suggested that Ms Mirza was probably not the right person to lead a review into racial inequality.
“Any enquiry into inequality has to acknowledge structural and systemic factors. Munira Mirza’s previous comments describe a ‘grievance culture’ within the anti-racist field and she has previously argued that institutional racism is ‘a perception more than a reality’,” a spokesperson said.
“It is difficult to have any confidence in policy recommendations from someone who denies the existence of the very structures that produce the social inequalities experienced by black communities.”