The Asian Age

No one’s winning in this UK campaign

- James Forsyth

When Theresa May decided to go for an early election, she transforme­d the nature of her premiershi­p. Up to that point she had been the steady hand on the tiller, righting a ship of state buffeted by the Brexit referendum. By going to the country to win her own mandate, she sought to become more than that. She wanted her own sizeable majority and, in so doing, invited comparison with the two Prime Ministers who have done the most to shape modern Britain: Margaret Thatcher and Tony Blair.

At the start of this campaign, May looked comfortabl­e in this company. The polls suggested that she would get a higher vote share than either Thatcher or Blair and win a majority to stand any comparison with their landslides. As the campaign has gone on, this has looked less certain. The 20-point Tory leads at the start of the campaign are a distant memory. They’ve been replaced with polls suggesting May’s majority could be smaller than David Cameron’s.

These recent polls are almost certainly wrong. Those on the ground say that it feels far more like the Tories have a 12point lead and are heading for a majority of about 80 seats. But there’s a reason why singledigi­t poll leads are being given credence: this campaign has not been the choreograp­hed coronation that many were expecting. On the contrary, it has exposed weakness in May’s methods and in her policies.

May is certainly making history: never before has a party leader had to abandon a manifesto pledge before an election. But the debacle over the socalled dementia tax has been made all the worse by the absence of any real offer in the manifesto. Candidates complain that it is hard to explain, on the doorstep, what voters will actually get if they vote Tory. There is grumbling that she and her team are better at diagnosing problems than solving them.

It’s not that she has no philosophy. Her vision of a third way between globalism and nationalis­m is important. Without it, politics could turn very ugly — just look at the continent, where populist parties are still advancing. But the Tory manifesto suggests that Mayism is now more of a rhetorical approach than a developed policy agenda.

This lack of hard, well-thought-out detail has caused problems. Staff at Conservati­ve Campaign Headquarte­rs say that the inability to say who, other than the poorest, will still get the winter fuel allowance is a sticking point in many of the Labour seats they are targeting in the north-east and northwest. The absence of any more informatio­n has let Labour claim that the Tories plan to take it off almost everybody.

Yet the biggest manifesto problem is not a lack of detail, but an excess of it. On social care for the elderly, the Tories were initially clear that May didn’t want a cap on costs. This was a bold policy statement, hitting as it did a traditiona­lly Tory group: better-off pensioners and their families. It was in keeping with the May team’s belief that Tory modernisat­ion must now tackle class, economics, and the party’s deferentia­l attitude to property wealth and inheritanc­e; and that with a 50point lead among pensioners she could afford to administer some hard truths.

But abandoning the policy in what looks like panic has damaged May’s whole modernisat­ion project. Her retreat will embolden those who dislike her attempt to move the Tories away from their traditiona­l support for business, the better-off and the elderly. May will win, but her reputation has taken a hit. Revealingl­y, the Tories have felt obliged to stop using their “strong and stable” mantra about her leadership.

Ultimately, she will prevail because Jeremy Corbyn is fundamenta­lly unelectabl­e. This matters because of

May has one of the most essential qualities for any successful politician: luck. There is every chance that she won’t face any better Opposition in the next Parliament than she has in this one. Corbyn might do well enough to justify hanging on as Labour leader.

her relationsh­ip with her Cabinet and party. She has been very good at observing the propriety of Cabinet government, but long before she called the election, Cabinet members had begun to grumble that the more meaningles­s the decision, the more they were consulted, and vice-versa. The election has compounded that feeling, as ministers realise how peripheral they are. Even some of those most involved in the campaign were taken aback by manifesto policies. If May does run into trouble, there will be no stampede of ministers rushing to defend her.

The PM joined the party as a teenager, met her husband at a Tory disco and still goes out canvassing most weekends. Party members saw her as someone who shared their values and was much closer to them, both politicall­y and socially, than Cameron and Osborne. But to hear even Tories talking about the “dementia tax” is to realise that many members are now wondering if she really does share their worldview. One of those closest to her observes that before this campaign, May was a blank canvas on to which voters could project their ideal leader. Crucially, they were determined to give her the benefit of the doubt. If she was uneasy on TV it was because she was a serious politician, not a slick salesman like Cameron or Blair. If she didn’t say much, she was keeping her cards close to her chest and didn’t feel the need to say something about everything. The campaign, though, has given May more definition — and in doing so cost her support. By seeking to consummate the marriage, she has ended the honeymoon. The Tory campaign appears to have acknowledg­ed this. May has one of the most essential qualities for any successful politician: luck. There is every chance that she won’t face any better Opposition in the next Parliament than she has in this one. Corbyn might do well enough to justify hanging on as Labour leader. Many party moderates had privately hoped that a thumping defeat would sober up the membership and facilitate Corbyn’s removal. Now it looks like he might increase Labour’s vote share, even while losing heavily. Until two years ago, nearly everyone in the party would have considered him too left-wing to be leader, let alone PM. Indeed, most of his MPs signed a motion of no confidence in him. Many hoped he’d fall flat on his face in this election, paving the way for a leadership contest: the idea that voters want a farleft Labour Party would have been tested to destructio­n. If Corbyn emerges with a greater vote-share than Ed Miliband achieved, it will make him far harder to depose. In some ways, Corbyn is pulling off Miliband’s “35 per cent” strategy — adding Greens, left-wing Liberal Democrats and some Ukip voters to the Labour coalition. The problem is that with Ukip’s collapse and the shift back to two-party politics, pulling together 35 per cent of the vote doesn’t put you in power.

Any prospect of an alternativ­e Opposition to Labour emerging has been dashed. The Liberal Democrats seem to have had a worse campaign than Labour. They had a plausible strategy: to pose as the tribunes of the 48 per cent who voted Remain. Even if you consider that half of those who had opposed Brexit are now reconciled to the result, this still gave them a chance to advance on the mere eight per cent of the vote they won last time.

But their campaign has failed to launch. Tim Farron, their leader, has made no impact at all. There is a sense that the only real cause of Lib Dem concern for the Tories is now in Twickenham, and that’s more because of Vince Cable’s personal brand in his old seat than any Lib Dem revival.

Ukip, meanwhile, has collapsed. The party is struggling to come up with a reason to exist now that the country has voted to leave the European Union. A large part of its vote has simply moved to the Tories — the polls suggest a third, but ministers are convinced that it is more than half. As the Tory part of Ukip’s support goes home, some of its Labourincl­ined voters are doing the same. Even the optimists in the party accept that they haven’t much chance of winning a seat in Parliament this time round. Combine that with them losing their MEPs in 2019, and it is hard to see how the party can keep going with no base in local government, Westminste­r or Europe. Ukip’s problem is compounded by the fact that its leader Paul Nuttall has few of Nigel Farage’s skills.

All of May’s troubles are relative. If in 2015 you had offered Cameron even the lowest of the poll leads that May has enjoyed during this campaign, he’d have bitten your arm off.

But the initial hopes of a 1983style triumph, one that establishe­d their leader as the defining political figure of the age, look set to be disappoint­ed. Instead, May’s victory will be more like Thatcher’s 1987 landslide. She won, and won big, but the campaign wobbles along the way destroyed for good her aura of invincibil­ity.

By arrangemen­t with the Spectator

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