Ukip defection and 'sexting' scandal cause Tory chaos
Mark Reckless
blames PM for shock resignation, as minister Brooks Newmark quits after being
caught sending explicit photos
Toby Helm and Andrew Rawnsley
The Observer, Saturday 27 September 2014 / http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2014/sep/28/tory-conservatives-mark-reckless-ukip-brooks-newmark
David Cameron suffered a devastating double
blow on the eve of the Tory party conference as his minister for civil society
resigned over a sex scandal and a second Conservative MP defected to Ukip.
As the prime minister sent RAF fighter
planes into action over Iraq ,
domestic troubles inside his own party dramatically punctured the optimism
among Tory delegates as they headed to Birmingham
for their last annual gathering before next year's general election.
The first blow came when Mark Reckless, the
MP for Rochester and Strood, delivered the news
that he was defecting to Ukip, at the anti-EU party's conference in Doncaster . His decision came just weeks after Douglas
Carswell, formerly Tory MP for Clacton , had
quit to join Nigel Farage's party saying the Conservatives were not serious
about reforming the EU.
Blaming Cameron directly, Reckless, another
Eurosceptic who wants the UK
to leave the EU, said the Conservative leadership was "part of the problem
that is holding our country back". Amid rapturous applause from Ukip
delegates he announced that he would stand down in order to fight a byelection
under Ukip's colours.
Voters, he declared, felt "ripped off
and lied to" over Europe and immigration.
They needed to believe that Britain
had control over who came into the country and in what numbers. "At the
moment we do not have any sense of that," he said. He added: "I
promise to cut immigration while treating people fairly and humanely. I cannot
keep that promise as a Conservative; I can keep it as Ukip."
Reckless won the seat for the Tories in
2010 with a majority of just under 10,000 over Labour. Farage told BBC News
that he would do "whatever it takes" to get Reckless elected.
"This man has shown huge courage. He has thrown his lot in with us and we
will do everything we can to get him elected."
No sooner had the Conservative party
absorbed news of Reckless's defection than it emerged that Brooks Newmark, a
father of five and campaigner to increase the role and number of women in
politics, had resigned from the government after being caught sending explicit
pictures of himself over the internet to women, in a tabloid newspaper sting
operation. After being told that the story would appear in a Sunday newspaper
Newmark issued a statement saying he was quitting. He appealed for privacy for
himself and his family.
The double disaster means the Tories now
meet amid a sense of crisis over the threat posed by Ukip, and sleaze, just at
the time when they had hoped to unite and turn their fire on Labour. The party
had been feeling more upbeat than for months, after Ed Miliband's Labour
conference speech was heavily criticised in the media when it emerged that he
had forgotten to make any direct mention of the deficit.
Reckless's shock decision to jump ship to
Ukip means Cameron's party now faces two critical byelection fights against
Ukip at the very time when it was hoping to concentrate on honing its
anti-Labour messages ahead of next May's general election.
In a sign of concern among Tory moderates
about the prospect of a shift to the right, former Home Office minister Damian
Green warned Cameron: "We must at all costs and at all times resist the
temptation to become UKIP-lite."
Sarah Wollaston, Conservative MP for
Totnes, tweeted: "The Conservative party won't gain extra support by
shifting right but millions of centre-right voters would move elsewhere, myself
included."
She later added: "I'm staying put and
fighting for the centre-right to be at the heart of the Conservative party, not
a Ukip panic attack."
Michael Dugher, Labour's shadow minister
for the Cabinet Office, described the defection as "a hammer blow to David
Cameron's already weakened authority. David Cameron has always pandered to his
right, and even they are now deserting him."
Tory chief whip Michael Gove held talks
with Reckless after Carswell's defection as rumours circulated that he might be
about to follow his close friend out of the party, but to no avail. After
Carswell defected, Farage said that many more Tories would defect to Ukip if he
held on to the seat in the byelection, an outcome that looks likely according
to recent opinion polls. But he gave no hint that another defection might come
so soon.
The Conservatives described the defection
as "completely illogical". But it is bound to fuel speculation that
other Tories could soon jump ship. As Reckless was introduced on stage at the
Ukip conference by a clearly delighted Farage, the crowd broke out into whoops
and cheers.
Asked about other possible defections,
Farage replied: "We have these conversations. Of course, there are
Conservatives I am talking to but there are Labour people too. There are Labour
people who are deeply frustrated with Ed Miliband's leadership."
Tory veteran Michael Heseltine says that,
while the Conservatives have to worry about Ukip, he believes Farage's party
will be a "short-term phenomenon". The pro-EU former deputy prime
minister says in an interview with the Observer that, rather than being
deflected by Ukip, the Tories badly need to develop policies that resonate more
strongly in deprived northern areas if they are to maximise their chances at
the next general election. He sees the Tories' absence in large parts of Scotland and
the north as a serious weakness the party must overcome.
Heseltine insists that, as the
"rightful owners" of the one-nation mantra of government – and
particularly in the light of the referendum on Scottish independence – the
Conservatives must rebuild support in the poorest regions. With the party holding
just one parliamentary seat in Scotland
and increasingly absent across large swaths of the north, Heseltine describes
the party's weakness in these areas as "deeply depressing".
"Without any shadow of doubt, there is
a very important challenge for the Conservative party to have policies and to
articulate policies in the language that resonates in those areas," he
says.
He adds: "What is missing are the
ladders of aspiration, trying to say to people in those communities, 'look, we
can help you get out of this condition'. You may have to help them by knocking
down a tenement block and building some decent housing, but they can't do that
themselves.
"Just going on repairing the leaks is
not dealing with the problem."
An Opinium/Observer poll puts Ukip on 17%.
Labour on 34%, the Conservatives on 32%, the Lib Dems on 7% and the Greens on
4%.
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