The Sunday Guardian

Conservati­ves feel the need for renewal

Activists are now looking to the backbenche­s for a challenger to the stale state of Conservati­sm.

-

The UK Parliament is in recess, but the machinery still turns. Conservati­ves’ efforts are exposing Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn’s infatuatio­n with President Nicolas Maduro of Venezuela. In spite of Labour MPs calling for Corbyn to support democracy and not dictatorsh­ip, Corbyn has failed to condemn the regime and its ruinous policies. Corbyn’s token has been a statement condemning the violence on both sides and “of the security forces that have been killed by people on the streets”.

This week, Corbyn, the popular campaigner, embarked on a summer roadshow to marginal seats. After the students’ fees fiasco, he wants to keep his credibilit­y with the young Corbynista­s. Labour is preparing for an earlier than scheduled election; all the talk about deselectin­g less left-wing MPs has dried up.

Philip Hammond has dropped in the popularity polls, probably due to the baffling remarks he made to the French newspaper Le Monde about “unfair competitio­n” with EU, proposing not to cut UK taxes and regulation “unfairly”, post-Brexit. Experts say trading regulation­s have to be adjusted to dovetail both services and goods to fit with new partners; experts say cutting business rates, customs duties and VAT would boost UK’s competitiv­eness. At the moment, Hammond (a Remainer) does not seem to be giving a competitiv­e advantage to Britain, which, after all, is the whole idea of Brexiting.

Theresa and Philip May have been vacationin­g in Italy. David Foroni, the pianist in a Lake Garda hotel bar, played God Save the Queen as he observed the Mays. May and the British guests respectful­ly stood and sang the anthem’s lyrics. According to a Conservati­ve survey, May’s esteem in the public eye and among party members has risen slightly; at the moment, the top three Cabinet favourites who jostle for the number one position are David Davis, Michael Fallon and Michael Gove. But there are also calls for a fresh face. The Tories are tired of Toryism, which doesn’t work. Activists are not looking for a Tory version of Jeremy Corbyn, or a new incarnatio­n of Margaret Thatcher. They are looking to the backbenche­s for a challenger to the stale state of Conservati­sm. Their eyes alight on the cerebral and humorous Jacob Rees-Mogg, who, although outwardly does not look like a moderniser, he may be the Renaissanc­e man needed for Conservati­sm. Rees-Mogg joined Twitter in July, tweeting in Latin “Tempora mutantur, et nos mutamur in illis”, which, roughly translated, means “Times change, and we change with them”. It is typical of Rees-Mogg, a history scholar, to take his inspiratio­n from the past and add a contempora­ry twist. On Instagram, Rees-Mogg is clev- erly building up a picture of himself as a man for all seasons, as in the play by Robert Bolt: “A man of principle, envied by his rivals and loved by the common people and his family.” Rees-Mogg has the very British qualities of self-deprecatio­n and rebellious sincerity which have developed his cultish following. An arch-Brexiteer, this week he claimed that legally the UK owes the EU nothing. Politicall­y, he has endurance and increasing­ly his quirkiness is being appreciate­d.

Theresa May is still in a weak position. “Tips” on how May can seize authority, are being offered via mainstream media. May’s former advisor Nick Timothy, in a clean shaven debut in the Telegraph, presents his arguments about the degenerati­on of social mobility, the decline of young homeowners­hip and his ideas of the dangers in free-market capitalism. Reputedly, Timothy will also shortly begin another column in that other bastion of the conservati­ves, the Sun; it is unknown if these newspapers support his ideas or are giving him the rope to properly put an end to his ideas, which after all failed to win the June election, but will inspire internal debate and renewal.

New ideas are certainly needed as Damian Green, Secretary of State and effectivel­y the Prime Minister’s deputy, recently said at the Bright Blue Think Tank conference on social reform that the Conservati­ve Party had to “think hard, work hard and change hard”, particular­ly for the 18-35-yearold metropolit­ans. He said, “The modernisat­ion of the Conservati­ve Party needs to start now.” Green is still trotting out the noble but hackneyed Theresa May slogan, “A country that works for everyone”. But “everyone” is now immune to the good intentions this encompasse­d.

George Freeman, MP, is pro-actively innovating. He is inviting a group of circa 200 Conservati­ves committed to grassroots renewal to a September summit of thinkers to plan a 2018 Ideas Festival, so far spanning literature, philosophy and culture. It remains to be seen who grabs the agenda for the renewal space in the months to come. Iraq’s Kurds are sticking to a plan to hold an independen­ce referendum on 25 September, despite a US request to postpone it, a high-ranking Kurdish official told Reuters on Saturday.

The United States and other Western nations are worried that the vote could ignite a fresh conflict with Baghdad and turn into another regional flashpoint. Turkey, Iran and Syria, which together with Iraq have sizeable Kurdish population­s, all oppose an independen­t Kurdistan.

“The date is standing, 25 September, no change,” said

 ??  ?? British PM Theresa May
British PM Theresa May

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India