The Tories now face a choice: lose office with
honour or burn everything in sight
Rafael Behr
Opposition is a state of mind – and Rishi Sunak’s
party is already a long way down the road
Thu 2 Feb
2023 06.00 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2023/feb/02/tories-lose-opposition-party
Governing
parties do not become oppositions overnight. Well, strictly speaking, they do.
Come an election, regimes fall between polls closing at 10pm on Thursday and
ousted leaders conceding on Friday morning.
But there
is a more gradual transition to opposition as a state of mind – an exhaustion
of the will to govern and a dissolution of discipline into factional rancour.
That journey precedes an election defeat but also makes one more likely. MPs
lose hope of victory. The leader runs out of inducements to loyalty. Attempts
to show strength fail, advertising weakness instead.
Voters
smell decay and recoil from the source. Even the government’s supporters start
to anticipate defeat as a euthanising mercy. How far down that path have Rishi
Sunak’s Tories travelled? Where is the point of no return?
Conservatives
comfort themselves that little of the present was foreseen in the past, which
suggests that electoral decimation is not fixed in their future. Labour MPs
intone the same mantra to ward off complacency.
Years of
volatility, the submersion of what used to be “normal” politics by Brexit and
the pandemic have bred expectation of the unexpected. But ambitious Tories
aren’t betting on a fifth term in government. The list of MPs who are quitting
parliament at the next election includes rising stars (Dehenna Davison),
mid-career ministerial midfielders (Chris Skidmore) and seasoned frontbench
veterans (Sajid Javid), among others of all ages and factions.
A related
trend is high-profile figures branching out into the media. Jacob Rees-Mogg and
Nadine Dorries have done deals to host their own chatshows on GB News and Talk
TV respectively. They haven’t done that to support the prime minister.
Preening
populism is a competitive market. Success depends on generating news and
stirring controversy, which means making trouble for the government. The box
office demands blue-on-blue action.
Sunak has
been in Downing Street now for 100 days, which is more than double the time Liz
Truss spent there but still short enough for it to feel premature to write him
off already. A case for optimism was made at a recent cabinet away day at
Chequers by Isaac Levido, Sunak’s campaign strategist (who is paid to think of
reasons why the cause is not lost), and, over dinner, by William Hague
(speaking as a survivor of lost Tory causes).
Hope of a
Conservative revival rests on the softness of Labour support – people are not
excited by Keir Starmer – and the precedent of 1992, when John Major pulled off
a surprise victory over Neil Kinnock. Hague also reminded his audience what
happened next: descent into sleaze, perpetual rebellion and landslide defeat.
There are
plenty of scenarios between the polls of 1992 and 1997, and no reason why
voters in 2024 should faithfully re-enact battles that were fought on a
different political landscape in a bygone century.
It is true
that the current leader of the opposition lacks Tony Blair’s easy magnetism.
The spectre of 1992 might not feel current enough to lift Tory spirits but it
still spooks the hell out of Labour, and Starmer still looks more like a man
creeping up on power than one striding purposefully towards it.
Labour MPs
privately concede that their poll lead describes flight from the Conservatives
more than attraction to an opposition platform that few could articulate in
bullet points.
But it is
easily forgotten how much that was also true in the mid-90s. The scale of
Blair’s victory was amplified by demoralised Conservative supporters staying at
home and Liberal Democrats picking up votes from people who were focused on
getting the Tories out. Fewer people voted Labour in 1997 than had voted Tory
in 1992 (13.5 million versus 14.1 million).
An
underappreciated ingredient for Labour success is lack of public horror at the
prospect of Starmer entering Downing Street. He doesn’t have to make pulses
race as long as he doesn’t make stomachs turn or skin crawl, which has been a
problem with his recent predecessors.
In that
context, Starmer’s style – sounding like a headteacher stepping into a school
in special measures – might be the right one, or at least the one that works
best within his limited performance range. He has been a big disappointment to
those craving socialist evangelism or denunciations of Brexit. Their
frustration might depress Labour’s vote share, but not in ways that do the Tories
much good.
A shortage
of eager Starmerites will be a weakness in government, when unpopular decisions
have to be taken, but it is not an insurmountable obstacle to being a
government-in-waiting. Especially not when the governing party is practically begging
to be put into opposition.
Starmer’s
base is not among politics fans who wear their colours with tribal pride. It is
the quiet voters in the middle who are tired of ideological adventures and
polarising spectacle. He can satisfy a taste for government that is benignly
boring and doesn’t induce despair or eye-rolling dismay.
Sunak
recognises that appetite, which is why on his first day in the job he promised
a new era of integrity and professionalism. The subsequent 99 days have shown
that his party has other ideas. They can’t agree on what good government
involves for long enough to put on a display.
There is a
faction that thinks Liz Truss’s economic policy – tax cuts financed by
imaginary growth projections – was not a disaster but too much of a good thing
that financial markets found hard to digest. There is also a camp that thinks
Boris Johnson was blameless in his own downfall, traduced by cowards and
traitors.
That makes
a significant cohort of MPs who think their leader is an agent of decline and a
leader who thinks the blockage to recovery is found on his own backbenches. It
is not a unique affliction, but nor is it a syndrome that can be resolved in
office. The obstruction is no mere question of policy or direction. It goes
deeper, entwined and embedded in the guts of the party. It can’t be loosened
without electoral intervention. It needs voters to flush the lot of them out of
power.
Rafael Behr is a Guardian columnist
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