OPINION
Britain’s Conservative Party is suffering from a
talent vacuum
Johnson’s populist politics have left the UK in a
dangerous place, and there’s no one left to provide any balanced and moderate
policy ideas.
BY JAMES
FITZGERALD
AUGUST 28,
2022 1:18 AM
https://www.politico.eu/article/britains-conservative-party-is-suffering-from-a-talent-vacuum/
James
Fitzgerald is a financial journalist and chief reporter at Citywire.
As the
United Kingdom’s prime ministerial hopefuls Liz Truss and Rishi Sunak struggle
to nail down a coherent direction for the country, it has become increasingly
evident that outgoing Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s 2019 clean-out of Tory moderates
has left the party suffering from a lack of talent and a vacuum of policy
ideas.
Johnson’s
wild swing to the populist right after winning an 80-seat majority was the
beginning of the end for moderate Tory political ideals and programs.
The lack of
experience in his Cabinet and, indeed, the potential policies being tossed
around by leadership candidates Truss and Sunak, highlight that the government
has run out of ideas, which doesn’t bode well for the country as it enters a
period of uncertainty and a cost-of-living crisis not seen since the end of the
World War II.
Both Truss
and Sunak have spent weeks on their respective campaigns, throwing policy
proposals around with gusto: Tax cuts benefiting the wealthy, when inflation is
in double digits and the poor are suffering most? Sure. Cutting the civil
service and tackling its “woke” ideology? Why not? It was even revealed
recently that the Treasury’s considering giving already strained GPs the
responsibility of deciding whether people deserve extra cost-of-living relief.
The
fundamental issue with Truss and Sunak’s policy spray-around is that none of it
is consistent or very well thought out, and it’s purely targeted at the
160,000-plus Conservative members who are going to decide who will become the
next prime minister. This week’s YouGov poll, putting Labour ahead by 15
points, shows that huge swathes of the country aren’t exactly confident that
these ideas will help them through this crisis.
Foreign
Secretary Truss, for example, with her promise of a growth boom and tax cuts
across the board, doesn’t seem to realize — or simply doesn’t care — that these
policies will probably lead to a massive inflationary spiral over and above the
double-digit price hikes the U.K. is already suffering from. Former
Conservative Chancellor Nigel Lawson warned this could be the case earlier this
month, stating that former Prime Minister Edward Heath’s similar policies in
the 1970s crippled the British economy and put millions out of work.
And though
it’s not necessarily surprising that coherent economic policy isn’t either
candidate’s strong suit, it is just a bit shocking when we consider that Sunak
was chancellor for the best part of two years.
What’s
becoming clear, however, is that the 2019 exodus of moderate Conservatives —
due to Johnson’s desire to swerve to the right and promote his supporters — has
created a void. There are currently very few experienced ministers left in
Cabinet, and especially in the Treasury.
Ken Clarke,
who was home secretary from 1992 to 1993 and chancellor of the Exchequer from
1993 to 1997, retired from the Commons in 2019 after losing the Conservative
whip, having voted to block a ‘no-deal’ Brexit. Phillip Hammond, former Prime
Minister Theresa May’s right-hand man in No.11, is also gone. And so too is
2019 leadership hopeful Rory Stewart, the former secretary of state for
international development and minister of state at the Ministry of Justice who
spent years in Iraq and Afghanistan with the Foreign Office. He now spends his
days hosting a political podcast. Even Winston Churchill’s grandson and Conservative
party grandee Nicholas Soames had enough, stepping away from the government
after butting heads with Johnson over Brexit in 2019.
Instead,
both Truss and Sunak have trumpeted Margaret Thatcher as inspiration for their
policy ideas, and they’ve even begrudgingly agreed with some of former Labour
Prime Minister Gordon Brown’s recent proposals to fix a broken economy — such
as stopping the looming increase in the energy price cap.
The only
problem with this, however, is that Thatcher was prime minister 30 years ago,
when the economy was in a very different state than it is now, and she’s been
dead for 10 years. Meanwhile, Brown was obviously a progressive who wanted to
spread money across the country — especially to the less fortunate — which isn’t
exactly popular with Tory voters.
Things
could have been different had Hammond or Clarke still been present in the back
benches, ready to tap Truss and Sunak on the shoulder to provide guidance in
steering the U.K. through the current crisis, and to quietly have a word when
their ideas are balmy. But this is no longer a possibility. It seems, moderate
ideas are old news, and offering incoherent policy to appease the Conservative
faithful is in vogue.
Simply put,
the now outgoing Johnson’s populist politics have left the U.K. in a dangerous
place. There is, frankly, no one left in the Conservative party to provide any
balanced policy proposals, as no one has any experience in doing so.
instead,
what the U.K. is left with is two prime ministerial hopefuls throwing ideas at
a wall and hoping something sticks — which will only harm their election hopes
in 2024 and throw the country into a bigger crisis.

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