Belfast Telegraph

Theresa May’s reckless decision to call election comes back to haunt her

This is a make-or-break conference for the Prime Minister... if she gets it wrong, it could be curtains for her and the Tories

- ... with Chris Moncrieff

Now it is her job to slap down those aspirants to her post without creating yet more waves of fury

Will this be remembered as the Year of the Swan for the Conservati­ve Party — calm and majestic for the public view above the waterline, and furious paddling beneath it?

That is how I expect the Tory conference to proceed in Manchester as the week progresses. Only a year ago the Tories were laughing about the election of Jeremy Corbyn as the Labour leader, assuming they would wipe the floor with the party under his leadership.

How wrong they were. Now Corbyn is even more securely installed in his job than Theresa May is in hers.

At Manchester the Conservati­ves are having, like the proverbial swan, to present a united front to the nation, while behind

the scenes and out of view the political blood-shedding will be going on, possibly doing irreparabl­e damage through self-inflicted wounds.

The row over the conduct of the Brexit negotiatio­ns is almost as savage within the Tory Party as is the criticism of it by Labour and the Liberal Democrats. And the very quality of May’s leadership is itself now open to very serious questionin­g, particular­ly her ill-conceived and reckless decision to hold a general election earlier this year.

Now it is her plain, but tricky, job to slap down those aspirants for her post without creating yet more waves of fury from the alarmingly growing number of malcontent­s in the Conservati­ve ranks.

Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson and Chancellor Philip Hammond are clearly at daggers-drawn — and that row shows no signs of ending.

And whatever we are told to the contrary, the Cabinet is plainly in a state of turmoil, which not only leads to problems in the Conservati­ve Party, but, far more seriously, to bad government.

May must use this conference to steady the dangerousl­y rocking boat and do it with as little arrogance as she can muster.

She should read, mark and learn Harold Wilson’s famous comment when he heard about a backbench plot to overthrow him.

He said: “I know what is going on. I am going on.” That must be her mantra if she is to survive.

Is Ukip, once the great white hope of the Brexiteers, now dying on its feet?

The party has just elected Henry Bolton (right) as its fourth leader in the space of a year — a fact which itself demonstrat­es the fragility of a movement that now appears to be hanging on to life by its very fingertips.

One supporter was not alone in being particular­ly pessimisti­c about its future. He tweeted: “The party will just go to sleep and not wake up again.”

The seven candidates who aspired to the leadership were a motley bunch of unknowns, some of them eccentrics and others even extremists. Ukip has done moderately well in the European Parliament, but has been a dismal failure at Westminste­r, where it really counts.

It once had a grand total of two (both ex-Tories) MPs in the Commons: one of them lost his seat and the other defected.

As its conference proceeds in Torquay, one gets the feeling it is simply playing at politics, with its future now firmly behind it.

It may have contribute­d to the outcome of the Brexit referendum last year, but now what is the point of the party, except to stand on the sidelines and shout abuse at its opponents?

Well, there are more than enough people already doing that.

So, why doesn’t the party simply curl up and fall into that endless sleep?

It has had its day.

How is it possible that the estimate for repairing Big Ben has doubled, almost overnight, to £61m?

Some searching questions need to be asked as to how the original estimate was so wrong. It was apparently conducted by so-called experts — who appeared to be miles out from the real cost — or is this yet another attempt to fleece the taxpayer? That wouldn’t surprise me.

It now appears the reglazing of the clock faces is much more complex than originally thought, as well as other major repair work.

You might have expected these so-called experts to have spotted these things. After all, they are not just minor adjustment­s.

And you can take it from me that this won’t be anywhere near the end of the story.

By the time Big Ben is bonging again, the cost will have at least doubled — and that’s a conservati­ve estimate.

So get ready to dig even deeper in your pockets. Tory MP James Cleverly

(above) is at least straightfo­rward enough to say publicly: “I’d love to be Prime Minister.” Others, whom you know are gagging for it, simply deny that is their objective in life.

Yet, when the opportunit­y does actually arise, you are in severe danger of being knocked over in the rush.

Boris Johnson may be shy about admitting his true intentions, but it is difficult to judge his frequent outbursts as anything other than a claim for the top job.

And I see efforts are being made to push Jacob Rees-Mogg into Number 10. He is not exactly the get-up-and-go character you might expect the Tories to be looking for, but it is astonishin­g how the job can so often make the man (or woman), rather than the other way round.

There are fears the current Conservati­ve conference will degenerate into little more than a vulgar battlegrou­nd for those who want to supplant May at No.10.

 ??  ?? Theresa May could face a leadership challenge from Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson
Theresa May could face a leadership challenge from Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson
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