Tories sense a chance to turn the tide in
critical month for Rishi Sunak
MPs, including veterans from the right, want the prime
minister to face down hardliners and cut Keir Starmer’s lead in the polls
Toby Helm
Political Editor
Sun 26 Feb
2023 08.00 GMT
The
Conservative party is embroiled in yet another seismic internal argument over
Brexit and lags way behind Labour in the polls. And all this as the country it
has governed for almost 13 years endures the worst public sector strikes for
decades and reels under double-digit inflation.
Yet despite
the turmoil, senior Tory MPs – including many from the old Eurosceptic right of
the party – are beginning to sense some hope under Rishi Sunak, at the very
point the prime minister appears in greatest trouble, and believe a turning
point could be approaching.
They say
there are opportunities in the coming weeks for the prime minister to face down
internal opponents and to assert his authority over – and define himself
against – his trouble-causing predecessor but one, Boris Johnson.
The former
Brexit secretary David Davis, who is critical of the way Johnson is kicking off
about the Northern Ireland protocol deal that he negotiated at No 10, said: “I
think that if Rishi Sunak gets an agreement on the protocol and that if the
budget next month is less austere than is currently being telegraphed, then
these could be the first signs that he is coming out of the storms. If that
happens we would still have a one in three chance of winning the next
election.”
That view –
far more optimistic than he and most colleagues would have offered just a few
weeks ago – is widely shared among Conservative MPs, large numbers of whom are
weary of division over Europe and just want to be in with a chance – even a
slight one – of winning next time.
Most
predict that only a rump of 20 or so hardcore anti-EU colleagues may rebel over
the protocol – and most backbenchers want Sunak to take them on and face them
down.
Martin
Vickers, the MP for Cleethorpes, a long-time Eurosceptic and current member of
the 1922 committee executive, who voted against the UK’s entry into the EEC in
1973, said “the public has moved on” from Brexit and so should his party. There
were signs inflation was falling and that interest rates would follow. “We have
reasons to be positive. For instance in April pensioners will receive a 10%
increase in their income. I agree that if the economy improves things could
look very different politically in 18 months’ time.”
The period
to Easter will be critical for Sunak. A lot will have to go right for him. But
if a protocol deal can be followed by sensible settlements with striking
nurses, doctors, teachers and train drivers and the public finances continue to
improve, then most of his MPs say he will at least be competitive with Keir
Starmer and Labour.
John
Stevenson, the MP for Carlisle who chairs the Northern Research Group of Tory
MPs in “red wall” seats, said Labour would be wrong to assume victory in areas
like his, or nationally. “Starmer has not cut through. He is just there. If we
can deal with the Europe issues, if immigration ceases to be such a problem and
interest rates come down there is a way back. I am an optimist.”
The latest
Opinium poll for the Observer last weekend gave Labour a comfortable 16-point
lead (44% vs 28% for the Conservatives). That is a huge deficit to claw back.
Charles
Walker, the MP for Broxbourne, admitted there were no “quick fixes” to restore
his party’s fortunes. But there was now at least a possible route through. Sunak
had a chance to “break with its addiction to poor decision making” and was well
suited for taking on Starmer, after the chaotic experience of Johnson and Liz
Truss.
Migrants
carry a boat on their shoulders on the beach at Gravelines, near Dunkirk, in
October 2022 before attempting to cross the Channel. Small boat crossings are a
touchstone for many Tory voters. Photograph: Sameer Al-Doumy/AFP/Getty Images
Walker
added that Sunak was a good foil for Starmer and the best kind of contrast to
Johnson. “Being serious about public policymaking is a prerequisite for mounting
an assault on Labour’s opinion poll lead,” he added. “Bluntly, in these
challenging domestic and international times, his [Sunak’s] disciplined,
thoughtful and discursive approach to problem solving is what is needed.”
On 10 March
Sunak will attend an Anglo-French summit in Paris with President Emmanuel
Macron, after years of arguments between the countries over Brexit and
immigration. It will be the first summit since 2018. Sunak hopes to build
closer co-operation than was possible under Johnson or Truss to tackle
migration across the Channel in small boats – a touchstone issue for many Tory
voters.
Then the
budget on 15 March will offer Sunak and the chancellor, Jeremy Hunt, a chance
to demonstrate they are getting a grip on public finances after the turmoil of
the Truss premiership. Many Tory MPs will want to hear about tax cuts, but most
will probably be satisfied with long-term commitments rather than immediate
reductions. Other Conservatives, including Stevenson, want Hunt to prevent 20%
rises in energy bills in April.
Sunak is
also planning new green announcements on net zero in an attempt to catch up
with Labour over its commitment to a clean energy economy. As one senior
adviser put it: “It is late in the day. But we may yet just have a half decent
platform on which to fight the next election.”

Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário