Gulf News

Does May deserve to win by a landslide?

Corbyn may appear to be unelectabl­e, but British voters still need to know more about the reticent prime minister’s political beliefs

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s one of the few 1983 election campaign veterans still in newspaper journalism, I can testify that Jeremy Corbyn is notably more hopeless even than the then Labour leader, Michael Foot. Foot won only 209 seats to Margaret Thatcher’s 397. I accompanie­d him on the stump. He was very, very bad, but he had at least been a senior Cabinet minister and was a charming man and, in his day (which, admittedly, was c. 1945), an excellent orator.

Corbyn is none of the above, and although he was one of the 209 — entering Parliament for the first time in that election — he seems to have learnt little from that experience. So I agree with the orthodoxy that almost nothing can lose this election for the Conservati­ves.

There is a key difference between 1983 and now, however, which is that voters knew a great deal about Thatcher. She had recently won the Falklands war and was busy turning the economy right side up.

They know remarkably little about Theresa May. This is partly by design. May is not the sort of politician who goes in for endless “This is who I am” speeches. She is reticent. People like this.

She is also the master of not saying things. Thatcher rose by speaking out, May by saying very little. Without a contest in her party or in the country, she became leader, and therefore Prime Minister, before you could say Nick Robinson. With so much luck that it amounts to skill, she has now cornered the market.

Uniquely in the western democracie­s, she is both the establishm­ent candidate — leader of the largest, oldest political party; senior minister already in office; voted Remain — and the disruption candidate — speaking out for the neglected Somewheres; taking us out of the EU. This means that the number of people who feel absolutely bound to oppose her — hardline Remainers, hardline socialists, Scottish Nationalis­ts, fans of Gerry Adams — probably amounts to no more than 25 per cent of the population, a very low fraction for a Tory leader.

Difficult questions

It is therefore the duty of all those of us who don’t like cornered markets to see this election as our first, best chance to ask May plenty of difficult questions — even if we will probably end up voting for her. Our quest may not be easy, since May is refusing to take part in television debates. She is quite right to do so.

It fits with her reluctance to accept agendas dictated to her by the mighty media “citizens of Nowhere”: she is under no constituti­onal obligation to television networks. But it will entail extra work for her pursuers.

Here is a quick, unsystemat­ic list of matters on which we do not know her views — the NHS, tax, Russia, Islamist ideology and subversion, the environmen­t, defence strategy, internatio­nal developmen­t and, which shows how clever she is, the EU itself. Even today, she has avoided telling us whether she is in favour of Brexit. All we know is that she says it will happen and that it will be a success.

To this could be appended a list of more philosophi­cal questions about which her views are, so far, opaque. What is her attitude to freedom, a word which she rarely uses? Does she think free markets are the key to prosperity? If so, how can an “industrial strategy” achieve anything? Does she believe in universal human rights law? What is her overall view of government spending and borrowing in the age of unfavourab­le demographi­cs? Would she call herself a Thatcherit­e?

So far, May has tended to please Leavers without deeply offending Remainers (though her “citizen of nowhere” remark ruffled some). But in the course of this campaign, Remainers should try to make her answer questions which matter a lot to them. What, for example, about the EU rights of all British citizens which will soon be lost, such as the right to work and live anywhere in the Union?

When so much is at stake in the forthcomin­g negotiatio­ns, voters can reasonably object to giving her a blank cheque. Significan­t numbers might vote Liberal Democrat as their way of doing so. Elections are usually fought on competing views of tax.

It is also permissibl­e to question the record on which May came into the premiershi­p. This year, after quite a long period in abeyance, knife crime has risen sharply in big cities. Critics say this is because May got rid of stop-and-search. What is her answer? Similarly, it was she, a home secretary in a tight corner, who hurriedly set up an inquiry into child abuse in high places, largely because of claims against senior politician­s and others which sounded prepostero­us at the time and subsequent­ly proved to be fantasy. It is now on its fourth choice as chairman, ending its third year, and running up a nine-figure bill, beset with false accusation­s, internal rows and impossible remits.

May acted in haste: does she now repent at leisure? Back in 1983, the Tory foreign secretary, Francis Pym, said on television that “landslides don’t on the whole produce successful government­s”. It was a silly remark from a Cabinet minister in a campaign, and he was duly chopped after the (landslide) victory. But that doesn’t mean Pym was wrong. One could at least venture that if May wants a landslide, she must first prove she deserves it.

Charles Moore has been editor of The Spectator, the Sunday Telegraph and The Daily Telegraph. He is the authorised biographer of Margaret Thatcher.

 ?? Luis Vazquez/©Gulf News ??
Luis Vazquez/©Gulf News

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