To judge from the British media’s treatment of the
General Election result, from 5th May (2005), one
would have thought, unless one hesitated, that Tony
Blair’s Labour Party had just suffered a defeat - such
has been the slumber of British politics since his
first election in 1997. Much stress, correctly, was
placed on the return to credibility of the
Conservative Party and the further progress (albeit
frighteningly slow) of the centrist Liberal Democrats.
Yet, net gains should not mask the simple truth that
the past 8 years have been wasted for the Tories and
that it is policies, in the main, that continue to
condemn them to another term in opposition.
Much praise has been heaped on Michael Howard’s
leadership. Certainly, he has made the Conservative
Party look as if it can one day return to power. The
campaign he spearheaded was thorough and professional.
However, his failure to increase the party’s share of
the vote (to any significant extent) from the
elections in 1997 and 2001, whilst Labour’s support
plummeted, should be admitted as a very serious
failure. The ‘dog whistle’ approach may have secured
that the committed turned out, but how many former
supporters from the Thatcher and early Major days have
been returned and what is the Party’s strategy towards
those under 40?
With hindsight the biggest error of the Conservative
Party, during the 1990s, was their shift to the right
at the very moment when Tony Blair became leader of
the Labour Party. With this move a very significant
part of the ‘soft right’ of British politics was
handed, almost without a blink, to the very social
democratic ‘New Labour’. Apart from the obvious fact
that the Tories remained in power too long, instead of
refreshing and offering the British electorate an
ideological hiatus, they turned to securing ‘clear
blue water’ between themselves and Labour.
Perhaps they were destined to lose in 1997 anyway, but
they failed to grasp the obvious in the run-up to the
June 2001 election – focussing on saving the pound
sterling – and in 2005 selected immigration, which,
whilst certainly an issue that needed to be tackled,
smacked of mild xenophobia and for every elector
(probably already a Conservative) that it attracted,
it probably turned off two. In the end, the familiar
and rather hackneyed totems of policemen on the beat
and lower taxes failed to excite interest.
History’s judgment of the Blair years is beginning to
form. It is certain to be highly critical and, whilst
admitting that it was well-marketed, will almost
certainly conclude that a decade of opportunity was
wasted. Yet, it has taken the Conservative Party
almost the length of that decade to once again reflect
on policy. What should follow is the first thorough
review of what the Conservative Party is and should
represent since the mid/late-70s. This review should
not be hasty and supercedes the importance of the
election of a new leader – although, without question,
it will be impossible for the Party to put a stamp on
its identity until that new leader has been elected.
Fortunately or unfortunately, the British electorate
is very different to the one presented to Margaret
Thatcher at the time of her first victory in 1979.
Britain is now a highly multicultural society, its
post-war immigrant population very successfully
integrated into the society (a much under-stated
international success story) and its younger
population fearful of continued harm to the
environment, having been sheltered from the labours of
post-World War II recovery. Still, this does not have
to be a hopeless situation for the Party.
During the early 1990s, the politically literate began
to identify the British Conservative Party as the most
formidable election winning machine in the liberal
democratic world. This ruthless desire for and to
remain in power may have proved vindicated, in the
short term, with their surprise victory in 1992, but
in the medium term the ‘regina-cide’ destroyed that
other most crucial component for electoral success –
party discipline. Consequently, for a decade now the
Conservative Party has been riven with factionalism,
often seemingly more divided within itself than with
any other party. Now it rests upon the current party
leadership to determine the philosophy and direction
of the Party for, probably, the next twenty years.
Thus, it will finally have to decide its position on
Europe, whether to be positive or largely negative.
Choose whether it wishes to be an essentially
conservative (with a small ‘c’) and somewhat
authoritarian party, or one embracing a modern liberal
message. It will also have to define the importance it
places on maintaining healthy public services versus
wider tax cuts, and, of course, its approach towards
the environment.
If the ratification process goes well and, sometime
during 2006, the British electorate get their
opportunity to vote on the European Constitution, the
Conservative Party should recommend, unequivocally, a
‘yes’ vote. It will only confirm its smallness and
lack of vision for the EU if it recommends a ‘no’. The
draft that is currently being voted on should by no
means be regarded as the last word – this is one of
the major successes of the EU, its ability to morph.
However, it should be embraced as the temporary
template. Perhaps the ratification process has come at
the worst possible moment, following the major
expansion in May 2004 and coming after 3 years of
woeful growth within the Eurozone, but this should not
render the ratification process as anything other than
essential. What the EU will then require, I would
suggest, is a long debate about the final outlook of
the organization, once countries like Ukraine, Georgia
and Serbia-Montenegro begin to complete the map of
Europe. For the British Conservative Party to fail to
provide the ideological leadership for this work, by
sidelining itself through any ‘no’, would be a tragedy
not only for the UK’s influence within the EU, but for
its natural supporters in Europe also.
The Labour Government is increasingly seen as
authoritarian and interventionist. The Tories should
reject this and promote a liberal agenda. Normally,
government should exist only to protect, assist and
secure, not to tell the individual how he should
behave when not a nuisance to others. Responsibilities
towards society, yes, of course, but this ought not to
be reflected in the introduction of ID cards, undue
monitoring of our private lives and the banning of
activities long legal, only to fulfil some ideological
distaste for certain minorities. Government will never
be able to make society perfect, and it should not
attempt to do so. Its role is to balance our personal
freedoms with limitations on our sovereignty necessary
to help maintain the aspirations of the wider society.
The Conservative Party should, thus, seek to enhance
civil liberty and reduce the role of government, so
that it can then truly clarify for British society
what the minimum standard of conduct should be.
Currently, too much of the British public is simply
burdened and confused.
Less government should be reflected in the
level/spread of the tax burden, also. During the 1980s
the Conservative Party convinced the public of this,
but during the 1990s (and ever since) it has lost the
argument. This was its own fault as it began to be
accused of tinkering with the National Health Service
(in particular), a ‘sacred cow’ in the British psyche
if ever there was one. The Conservatives have never
convinced the British public of their commitment to
the NHS, nor their willingness to adequately fund the
education system. This must change. The electorate is
not stupid, they recognize that the NHS has become a
bureaucratic/managerial monolith, but first the Tories
will need to convince them of what is wrong before
they attempt to undertake certain reforms. The Major
Government’s promotion of grant maintained schools,
City Technology Colleges and greater specialization in
schools was correct and largely adopted by the Blair
Government, but the British public remains unconvinced
that the Tories will ever adequately fund ‘education,
education, education’. Besides, Mr Howard’s approach
to student tuition fees was political opportunism of
the worst kind, usually reserved for the Liberal
Democrats.
As for the environment, anyone who has spent much time
in the industrialised but still developing world (as I
have) will know that nationalisation and government
plans will never be the solution to climate change. A
global environmental approach based much more (but
never completely – granted) upon market principles
will definitely have much more productive results, but
has anyone even begun to explain why and how? The
environment has for too long been hijacked by the
left. Whilst they should be credited for bringing the
matter to the world’s attention, their solutions are
not the solutions.
The purity of one’s ideology matters little without
power. Acquiring power, and keeping it, is all about
winning the argument. The tragedy of Britain’s recent
election was that the electorate had become deeply
unconvinced of ‘New Labour’s’ argument, but without a
sufficiently credible alternative they were returned
with a healthy majority almost by default. The
Conservative Party needs a new vision, reflecting the
requirements of the early 21st century, rather than
the sensibilities of my parent’s generation. In the
1980s, Mrs. Thatcher won the argument at home, now the
Party needs to lead and win the argument in Europe. At
least for the time being, the British electorate
appears to have marked out its tolerance level of
support for public services. The essence of
sovereignty and government has shifted; the Tories
must either grasp this reality or consign themselves
to further defeat.
23rd May 2005
Dr. Tim Potier is Assistant Professor of International
Law & Human Rights at Intercollege (University
College) in Nicosia. He writes regularly on matters
pertaining to international affairs, in general.