Boris Johnson’s disciples gathered to sing the
old hymns. But are they a real threat to Sunak?
Familiar faces on the Tory right met in Bournemouth to
pour scorn on the government. And they can certainly make the PM’s life harder
Michael
Savage
Michael
Savage, Policy Editor
Sun 14 May
2023 06.00 BST
It was
billed as the launch of a campaign to hand more power to Tory members. It was
not, its organisers repeatedly insisted, a group aiming to reinstall Boris
Johnson as party leader – or cause trouble for Rishi Sunak. It was about “taking
back control” of the Conservative party for the grassroots.
Yet as the
Conservative Democratic Organisation (CDO) met for its inaugural gathering in a
sunny Bournemouth on Saturday, it was less than 15 minutes after Tory MP Andrea
Jenkyns had belted out the national anthem that Johnson’s name was first
uttered on stage.
His close
ally and local MP, Conor Burns, said the party owed him a “debt of gratitude”
for delivering Brexit. Meanwhile, two boxes labelled “Team Boris” and “Team
Rishi” were placed outside the conference hall, and attendees were invited to
drop a ping-pong ball into one or the other to indicate their allegiance.
Soon after
Burns’s appearance, Tory donor Peter Cruddas got up to attack the “plotting”,
“secret meetings” and “collusion” that led to Johnson being removed by MPs. He
and other speakers called for more rightwing policies that, they said, party
members craved. Cruddas suggested the party under Sunak was now overseeing “the
reversal of the 2019 manifesto” and becoming “a centre-left party … of higher
taxes”.
Whatever
its motives, the key question for Conservative Campaign Headquarters (CCHQ) is
whether this group and its members – who gathered for what felt like a party
conference from a previous age – is a real threat to the sense of calm and
order that Sunak has sought to bring to his party after a year of ferocious
infighting. Or is it simply a small army of pro-Johnson disciples that will
have little impact?
If nothing
else, the event suggests there is still a radical strain in the Conservative
party’s bloodstream that could well play a significant role in the next
leadership contest, should Sunak depart soon after the general election.
It is not
the only event signalling a greater degree of organisation from the right. The
Bournemouth gathering comes before a three-day conference by the global
“national conservatism” group, which has its roots in the US right. A similar
cast list is likely to trumpet the Liz Truss-style agenda of low taxes that is
becoming the main concern for many on the Tory right. In reality, even MPs
close to Johnson find it hard to envisage him making a comeback before an
election – and also struggle to see him wanting to take on the thankless task
of leading the party in opposition. Yet the more significant concern for Sunak
is the personnel who attended the Bournemouth bash – and the threat they pose
to his plan to restore order to a party that has torn itself apart in recent
times.
Former
cabinet ministers Jacob Rees-Mogg, Priti Patel and Nadine Dorries attended –
and while there might be agreement that Sunak is safe in his post, they are
just some members of a group of MPs with the ability to make life seriously
difficult for the PM. From their utterances in Bournemouth, it appears that
Sunak will have to achieve a turnaround with a constant hum of discontent in
the background.
In one of
the most direct warnings from a senior figure, Patel, the former home
secretary, received a standing ovation as she warned the party was in decline –
and called on those present to defend Johnson’s 2019 manifesto, which she
warned was being torn up by the current leader.
Jenkyns
said some of her Tory colleagues belonged in the Lib Dems. Stewart Jackson, the
former MP and now Tory peer, said Johnson’s mandate had been thrown away.
Dorries,
the former culture secretary and one of Johnson’s biggest backers, was the most
passionate in defending the former prime minister’s record, but also the most
cutting in her analysis of the party under Sunak. “We are going backwards,” she
said, saying the performance since the 2019 election had been an “astonishing
political tumble”.
There were
other notable rumblings in the last week. Guto Harri, Johnson’s former
communications chief, revealed in a podcast that the former prime minister had
been so angry at what he saw as Sunak’s betrayal in helping to topple him that
he wanted to send him a video calling him something unrepeatable.
Then
business and trade secretary Kemi Badenoch made a provocative appearance in the
Commons after the government’s decision to do a U-turn on a plan to end EU laws
by the end of the year. Her decision to hit back at attacks from the European
Research Group of pro-Brexit Tory MPs, rather than attempt to keep them onside,
has gone down incredibly badly. Senior ERG figures said the episode had made it
more likely that the group could join forces with Labour over certain issues to
defeat the government.
These
concerns on the right show the tightrope Sunak is walking. They are also coming
despite the fact that one of the few political positives for the PM is the
absence of a real electoral threat on the Tory right flank. The Reform party,
created from the Brexit party, performed poorly where it ran in this month’s
local elections. “Without Nigel [Farage] coming back, I just don’t see that
there is a real threat there,” said one senior Tory sympathetic to the idea of
Johnson’s return.
While there
is no doubt that those in Bournemouth represent a chunk of the Tory membership
frustrated by the lack of Brexit progress and what they see as a “woke”
mainstream agenda, experts suggest there is little evidence of an electoral
bounty from the agenda they offer.
“Because
the Conservative party has become a radical right party, it means that it’s
probably squeezed that vote about as much as it can,” said Tim Bale, professor
of politics at Queen Mary University of London. “There aren’t that many voters
out there who will come flocking to the party if it moves any further in that
direction. It has probably mined all the voters there are to mine. But that
threat from Farage remains, if Richard Tice [the current Reform leader] were to
step back.”
In
Bournemouth, it was tempting to think that Conservative MPs were now sitting
atop a membership that was far to the right of them, creating the kind of
imbalance that saw Labour members deliver Jeremy Corbyn, a leader out of sync
with the parliamentary party.
But Bale
questioned that conclusion. “I think people overstate the degree to which the
Conservative party membership is much more rightwing than the parliamentary
party. I think there is still quite a lot of love for Boris there, but that’s
as much about the cult of personality than policy.
“You’re
always going to get politicians who like the limelight travelling to where they
will get applause and a lot of love, but that doesn’t mean the membership as a
whole is prepared to become enlisted in Boris’s zombie army.”
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