‘No one knows what we stand for’: Tory MPs in
despair ahead of Sunak’s crucial conference
With the party riven by factions and differences on
policy, the prime minister has a job on his hands trying to find a coherent way
forward
Michael
Savage Policy editor
Sun 1 Oct
2023 06.00 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2023/oct/01/tory-mps-rishi-sunak-conservative-conference
Before what
could well be the last Conservative party conference before the next election,
more than one MP reflected on the state of the party by invoking the infamous
jewellery mogul famed for mocking his own products and torpedoing his brand.
“It’s been
like Gerald Ratner saying his products were crap and then wondering why nobody
bought them,” said one MP, assessing the various criticisms being made of the
government by its own MPs. “That seems to be what’s going on with our offer to
voters. It’s almost like we’ve become a sort of protest movement masquerading
as a government.”
While it
would be wrong to suggest all Tory MPs are in despair about their party’s
fortunes – some see a recent poll recording a 30% vote share as a minor triumph
– talking to MPs across the party points to a clear diagnosis: the Conservative
party is suffering from an identity crisis many years in the making. This
week’s Manchester conference feels more like the uneasy peace talks of warring
tribes than a major rallying point before an election.
Tory
moderates arrive fretting over a collapse in the youth vote, net zero (in
favour) and keeping Britain inside international human rights treaties. The
traditional right of the party are worried about inheritance tax, net zero
(opposed) and leaving the European Convention on Human Rights. Red wallers want
more levelling up. A small but noisy band of Trussites want tax cuts now –
while an increasingly influential group on the radical right want a war on
woke.
The one
thing, perhaps the only thing, uniting the groups is an implied conclusion that
their party is in the wrong place and ideologically rudderless.
“[David]
Cameron would describe where we’ve come from, what we’re doing and where we
want to go – a narrative,” said one downbeat MP who has already decided to step
down at the next election. “Now we’re sort of defining ourselves by what we’re
against. You don’t really know what it is we stand for. It becomes quite
self-defeating.”
The
identity crisis risks being exposed in Manchester, suggests former cabinet
minister David Gauke. “You’ve got a sort of fundamental problem, which is that
the Conservative party doesn’t really know what it thinks,” he says. “What does
the Conservative party collectively believe in? Is it a more open, dynamic
economy? Is it one where the state takes a big hand in trying to equalise
opportunities and economic performance? Is it one that is driven by socially
conservative cultural values? The risk is that it’s a bit of everything and it
amounts to nothing.”
As if to
underline the point that Sunak is at the helm of a party in search of a common
goal, some of his predecessors have been offering their own blueprints. While
he is understood to be avoiding Manchester, Boris Johnson used his
pre-conference newspaper column, sometimes reserved for his thoughts on cheese
or his dog, to say that Sunak’s interest in ditching the HS2 rail line beyond
Birmingham would be “madness” and like “betraying the north”.
Johnson’s
lecture on the need for big state projects will soon be countered by a “Great
British growth rally”, headed by his doomed successor Liz Truss. The former
prime minister whose premiership lasted only three weeks after her one and only
leader’s conference speech last year will demand a smaller state and a slashing
of business taxes.
Future
challengers will also be stalking the halls of Manchester. Kemi Badenoch, the
trade secretary seen as a future leader, has a private drinks event. Liberal
Tories are, in their quiet way, fuming about Suella Braverman’s continuing
presence in government and leadership manoeuvrings. Some claim to have been
given “quiet assurances” that she would be sacked as part of an imminent
reshuffle, but she remains in place – even after a controversial speech on
illegal immigration in the US last week that No 10 apparently approved. “Sadly,
it begins to reflect on the prime minister,” said one liberal Tory MP. “The
Conservative party doesn’t win by becoming more rightwing.”
Then there
are the Tory MP groupings. Figures on the right, from Johnson ally Jake Berry
to the new favourite of the right Miriam Cates, will demand the replacement of
“Labour’s European rights and equalities laws”, tax cuts for families, a
halving of the number of visas awarded to migrant workers, foreign students and
their families - and a ban on “gender ideology in schools”. The Northern
Research Group, which had such sway under Johnson, has its own demands for
infrastructure projects and half a million more homes for the north.
The
conference list of fringe events itself reads like a catalogue of unresolved
issues that the Tory party would hand to its therapist. “War on woke – is it
popular and is it Conservative?” asks one. Another wonders: “Is it possible to
wean ourselves off car dependency while preserving individual choice?” Another
reaches for the existential: “What is the future of Conservatism?”
Given this
fraught backdrop, it is no wonder that Sunak has attempted to give some fresh
direction to his government. With even his own allies conceding that his
initial “five priorities” were either off track or seen as too weak to brag
about, Sunak used a summer holiday in California to hone a fresh set of
announcements to give a sense of momentum going in to the Tories’ 14th
consecutive year in power.
Yet MPs
said the ideas – most of which have been leaked in a sign of some hostility and
unease within the government – also demonstrated how hard it is for Sunak to
come up with a policy platform that is coherent and tolerated by the broad
swathe of his party. His personal obsessions are among the plans to effectively
ban smoking, scale back HS2, replace A-levels and push back climate targets.
However, before the biggest speech of his political career this week, the
policy flurry has left allies and critics concerned that they reflect the
incoherence of the party’s current mood.
“It does
feel like a sort of set of personal preoccupations,” said Gauke. “I look at it
and think if I were prime minister, we would have an agenda about prioritising
red ball cricket over white ball cricket, stopping people spitting chewing gum
on pavements and, possibly less popular, stopping people pronouncing H with a
“Huh”. That annoys me, but it’s not really a programme for government.” A
senior Tory MP has similar reservations. “It’s just sort of random things that
must have occurred to people at different junctures, and they don’t speak to a
coherent narrative,” they said.
An ally of
Sunak said that there was a large part of “let Rishi be Rishi” to the
programme. He is said to have resented having to sign off HS2 as chancellor –
and deeply dislikes smoking. However, as a wider “pro-motorist” package was
unveiled this weekend – including opposition to blanket 20mph limits – Tory MPs
detect another strategy at play. In order to kickstart the Tory poll revival,
Downing St is seeking to win back natural Tories who have switched to the
“don’t know” box in terms of voting intention. Shoring up that base is Sunak’s
first task.
“We’ve
chosen the sort of wider wedge issues that fire up some of our supporters in
that large ‘don’t know’ category,” said a former minister. “They’re the ones
who we really need to get back first.” It is clear to see why the strategy has
emerged. Special polling for the Observer reveals that a third (34%) of 2019
Conservative voters are currently intending to vote for other parties. In the
Midlands, only 61% of 2019 Tory voters plan to back the party again – and the
figure sits at 60% in the south of England – spelling trouble in the Tory
heartlands.
The issue
for Sunak is that, in his attempt to be seen as the leader with fresh ideas, he
will be accused of joining the Tory groups effectively criticising the past 13
years of Conservative rule. In another announcement on Sunday – a “long-term
plan for towns” – Sunak argues that “politicians have always taken towns for
granted and focused on cities”. It has resulted in “half-empty high streets,
run-down shopping centres and antisocial behaviour”. It raises obvious
questions for the Tory administrations that oversaw such a decline. One
northern Tory MP laments: “It amounts to an attack on our record and tarnishes
our brand.”
Ironically
given its Manchester setting, the issue that hangs over the conference is
Sunak’s apparent desire to scrap HS2 beyond Birmingham. The idea is linked to
the appeal to the party’s Middle England base. “They wanted to use some of the
savings for potholes,” said one weary official. Comparisons are being made to
John Major’s doomed “cones hotline”, which has since become political shorthand
for a regime that has run out of road.
Treasury
and transport department officials are said to have raised serious concerns and
may have to raise an official warning – known as a ministerial direction –
should ministers proceed.Not extending the line to Euston or beyond Birmingham,
they argue, means it no longer represents value for money.
Nonetheless,
can this flurry of activity hold the party together enough to mount a serious
election challenge? Some Tories are increasingly optimistic, although always
placed in the context of previous despair. A main gripe at meetings of the
backbench 1922 committee this year has been that the party was barely throwing
a punch.
“We don’t
want to be victims of events,” said one veteran MP. “We want to be setting the
agenda more, dragging your position on to our territory. I think you can say
that that’s pretty much what has happened. It could be a momentary blip in the
recovery but it could mark an upward trend … This week, I thought for the first
time it was just possible he could win a general election.”
A red wall
MP adds: “There has almost been this fatalistic view that people had over the
summer. We were just treading water and then, all of a sudden, boom, boom, boom
– policy after policy. The net zero change in particular was well done. The
mood has changed significantly in the past two or three weeks.”
Downing St
will hope that with an election looming, Tory discipline will kick in. One
former minister and Sunak critic is keen to try to hold the line. “It’s now
about fighting to make sure that we’re competitive in the next parliament and
that we’re not out for 10 years,” he said. “If there’s even the slightest
chance of that to happen, it is going to require us to remember that we have a
lot more in common than we do with Keir Starmer and Labour. One doesn’t need to
love everything that we’re doing to recognise it’s worth it to avoid wipeout.”
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