Tory MPs’ favourite Rishi Sunak faces challenge
to win over party members
Analysis: missteps mean he trails Liz Truss in polls,
and he will need to sell himself as a safer electoral bet
Heather
Stewart Political editor
Thu 21 Jul
2022 06.00 BST
Rishi Sunak
may have won the leadership ballot among Tory MPs but he will now face a
different audience, who have so far seemed largely immune to his charms –
160,000-odd grassroots Conservative members.
Sunak has
consistently struggled in polling among party activists. The latest
ConservativeHome survey last weekend showed him losing a head-to-head battle
with Truss by 42% to her 49%. YouGov polling of Conservative members showed him
trailing the foreign secretary by an even wider margin, 54% to 35%.
Tim Bale,
who co-authored a recent book, Footsoldiers, about political parties’ members,
said Sunak’s shaky hold on the membership probably stemmed from political
missteps earlier this year.
“I think
you have to go back beyond his resignation from the government and look at, for
example, the really poor reaction to his spring statement, which went down like
a cup of cold sick with Conservative members as well as MPs,” Bale said.
“The non-dom
issue really hurt him as well,” he added. Sunak’s wife agreed to pay UK tax on
her considerable worldwide earnings after news reports pointed to her non-dom
status.
Another
potential black mark for Sunak in the eyes of the Conservative party in the
country may be his role in defenestrating Boris Johnson.
No 10 have
made little secret of the fact that the prime minister blames his former
chancellor for plotting against him – though Sunak was not even the first
cabinet minister to resign, trailing Sajid Javid by a few minutes.
At his
campaign launch, Sunak paid tribute to Johnson, presumably to placate those MPs
and party members cross about the prime minister’s demise. The outgoing PM may
be “flawed”, Sunak said, but he has a “good heart”.
Back in
April, one-third of the ConservativeHome panel of party members thought Johnson
should resign, while more than half thought he should not.
Truss’s
loyalty to Johnson to the end – sitting alongside him at his final PMQs on
Wednesday – may score her some points with members.
Her policy
stance of immediate tax cuts may be less of a clincher, despite the stereotype
of Conservative members as rightwing ideologues.
A recent
paper for the thinktank UK in a Changing Europe, co-authored by Bale, suggested
that on economic policy at least, Tory members are actually considerably less
rightwing than the party’s MPs. “Rather than being closer to the average voter,
Conservative MPs sit to the right of party members, councillors and activists,”
the research said.
Meanwhile,
qualitative polling of party members by YouGov published this week suggested
policies are less important to them in picking a leader than personal
qualities.
When asked
to specify in their own words “what are you looking for in the new leader of
the Conservative party?” more than half of those surveyed (52%) named personal
attributes, such as honesty, intellectual strength or leadership skills, while
32% chose qualities that YouGov categorised as “conventional Conservatism,”
such as supporting lower tax and spending, or patriotism.
“One party
member told us they were looking for ‘someone with honesty and integrity, who
is willing to tell the truth without fear of the consequences. Someone who is
not in it for personal gain and sees it as a duty to serve. Someone who is
committed to all parts of the country but willing to be realistic about what
government can actually do and what we should do personally,’” wrote Patrick
English, YouGov’s associate director. “Meanwhile, another kept it short and
sweet, telling us they wanted ‘honesty. Integrity. Trustworthiness.
Leadership.’”
With years
of cabinet experience at the highest levels, it is hard to imagine that party
members do not already have a firm view about the personal qualities of Sunak
and Truss. But the polling suggests that to take the lead the former chancellor
will need to stress his leadership qualities, as well as just scrapping over policy,
which has formed the centrepiece of his campaign so far.
Despite
many members’ misgivings, Bale believes Sunak may ultimately win through if he
can convince enough of them that he is a better bet for winning the next
general election.
Both remaining
candidates were already hammering home the line that they could beat Keir
Starmer shortly after Wednesday’s result confirmed their places in the final
two – though Labour says it is not concerned about either of them.
“If you
look at the surveys of where their priorities are, winning the next election is
top. I suspect over the course of the next month the members will come to the
view that Sunak has a better chance of doing that than Liz Truss, and maybe
will act accordingly,” said Bale.

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