Senior Tories say Trump-style takeover could
precipitate party meltdown
Prominent members fear a tilt to the right could spell
the end in the ‘blue wall’ heartlands
Michael
Savage and Toby Helm
Sun 21 May
2023 07.00 BST
Senior
Tories are warning their party will be finished should it undergo “a Trumpian
style takeover” from the right, amid growing concerns that it risks political
meltdown in its “blue wall” heartlands.
Prominent
Conservatives from across the party are now increasingly concerned that a tilt
to the right and anger over the handling of Brexit could lead to the party’s
support collapsing in liberal, home counties seats in the same way that Labour
imploded in Scotland in 2015.
A backlash
is growing among liberal Tories after a week in which figures on the right of
the party championed Boris Johnson and accused Rishi Sunak of backtracking on
Brexit, while the home secretary, Suella Braverman, openly denounced “experts
and elites”.
The former
cabinet minister Matt Hancock told the Observer: “The Conservative party is
finished if it succumbs to a Trumpian-style takeover. These Conservative
Corbynistas are as destructive to the Tories as leftwing activists were to
Labour.
“The
liberal conservative majority needs to now stand up for the centre ground to
ensure this rightwing takeover doesn’t succeed. We moderates can’t let these
extreme voices and divisive arguments win the debate or claim the soul of the
party. They’re not only wrong and deeply unattractive but bad for political
discourse and the country. If the party decides that’s what it’s going to stand
for, it will be a massive mistake.”
Ed Vaizey,
the former minister and Tory peer, writes in the Observer that “the politics of
grievance is not a winning formula”. He warns that a failure to understand that
moving to the right was not a solution to the party’s electoral failures
delayed its recovery after 1997.
There is
concern that long-term Tory supporters in pro-Remain, liberal constituencies
may abandon the party. Jeremy Hunt’s constituency, South West Surrey, is
already being targeted by the Lib Dems, who are running local leaflets
highlighting rising bills, increased mortgage costs and the falling value of
savings.
New
analysis has increased fears of a blue wall crisis. The 2023 local election
Tory vote share in more Remain wards was far below what the party achieved
under David Cameron, according to research by Robert Ford, professor of
political science at the University of Manchester. Conservative votes in 2023
were down almost 14 points on their performance in 2015 in the most Remain
wards.
It is
causing panic among some Tories. “I’m more worried about the blue wall than
anything,” said one former cabinet minister. “I really think there’s a chance
that what happened to Labour in Scotland in 2015 could happen to us in the blue
wall at the next election.
“What are
we offering these voters now? Their taxes are getting ever higher and the
government isn’t doing a lot for them. We have seen what has happened in the
past, where a party can just have a meltdown. Last time, we were saved because
those voters were so concerned about the threat of [Jeremy] Corbyn. But that is
no longer the case. Many of them didn’t vote for Brexit, which has now been
done badly.”
It follows
a week that has seen senior figures on the right of the party call for more
rightwing policies. Priti Patel, Jacob Rees-Mogg and Nadine Dorries, cabinet
ministers under Johnson, all questioned the direction of the party last
weekend. Meanwhile, a series of Tory MPs joined Braverman at the National
Conservatism conference last week, which championed a more socially
conservative platform.
Lord
Heseltine, the former deputy prime minister, said his party was now heading to
lose the next election and would require a complete rebuild in the wake of
defeat. “At the moment the party is tearing itself apart,” he said. “It was Rab
Butler who rebuilt the party after the 1945 defeat, with a completely new
party, policy and philosophy. The party knew it had to win power. The same
thing is going to happen after this next election.”
Vaizey
warns that a lurch to the right could allow Labour to dominate for years. “We
have been here before,” he writes. “After our defeat in 1997, so many
Conservatives blamed the outcome on our party not being Conservative enough. It
was a long and hard struggle to get the party back to the mainstream, and to
re-learn the lesson that you only win in politics by looking forward, not back.
“You
actually have to like the country in which you live, and want to make it
better, in order for the public to want to back you. Harking back to a golden
age, with a wish-list of policies that are completely absurd in a modern,
developed nation, is for the birds.”
Ford said
that while caution should be taken before applying local election findings to a
general election, there was a significant threat to the Conservatives in blue
wall seats. “There have been large swings against the Conservatives in many
quintessentially home counties seats – for example the party’s vote fell in
most of the seats in Berkshire, Buckinghamshire, Cambridgeshire, Oxfordshire
and Surrey,” he said.
“If what
I’ve noticed in the local election results translates into a general election,
it is a real problem. You see the same kind of proportional swing dynamics in
2023 that we saw hitting the Liberal Democrats in 2015, or hitting Scottish
Labour in 2015 – or going further back, hitting the Conservatives in 1997. That
is a really dangerous scenario where the stronger you start, the further you
fall. When that happens, no one is safe.”

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