Daily Mail

DON’T LET THE GRINCH STEAL YOUR CHRISTMAS

At last Boris wins election date – and he’s leading polls. But with Lib Dems and Brexit Party threatenin­g Tory vote in key seats, the stark warning...

- By Jason Groves Political Editor

BORIS Johnson promised voters a new parliament for Christmas last night as he finally secured a General Election.

After weeks of dither and delay by opposition parties, MPs backed a Government Bill for a poll on Thursday, December 12.

Mr Johnson said a ‘ revitalise­d’ House of Commons would let Britain leave the EU in the new year.

Jeremy Corbyn, who backed an election just 24 hours after refusing to do so, said Labour would kick out the ‘ reckless’ Conservati­ves and deliver a socialist Britain.

The Prime Minister told MPs the election – the first in December since 1923 – would deliver Brexit after months of ‘unrelentin­g parliament­ary obstructio­nism’. He later addressed

Tory backbenche­rs, giving what one claimed was a ‘ King Henry V to Agincourts­peech’.

Conservati­ve MP Robert Halfon said: ‘He said forget about the polls, forget about everything you read, this is going to be an incredibly tough election.

‘No one wants to do an election in December, it’s going to be mega-tough and it’s going to be one of the toughest elections we could ever do.’ As battle finally commenced: n Mr Johnson restored the Tory whip to ten MPs kicked out last month for opposing a No Deal Brexit;

■ Tory sources confirmed the PM’s girlfriend Carrie Symonds will join him on the five-week campaign trail;

■ Brexit Party chairman Richard Tice said Tory MPs were pleading with him not to field candidates against them;

■ The Government headed off opposition attempts to move the polling date to December 9 and give the vote to 16- and 17-year-olds and EU nationals;

■ EU president Donald Tusk warned the latest Brexit extension ‘may be the last’;

■ More than 100 Labour MPs defied the whip and refused to vote for the election;

■ Plaid Cymru said talks were under way on pacts between pro-Remain parties;

■ Tory sources said Mr Johnson would pledge to deliver Brexit by January.

The election breakthrou­gh came after the Liberal Democrats and SNP broke ranks with Labour and backed an early poll in which they hope to benefit from Mr Corbyn’s unpopulari­ty with voters.

Mr Johnson had previously sought to get an election through a provision in the Fixed-Term Parliament­s Act that allows an early poll only if it is backed by two thirds of MPs. This effectivel­y gave Labour a veto but the backing of the minor parties allowed Mr Johnson to sidestep Mr Corbyn and bring in legislatio­n for an early election that required only a simple majority in the Commons.

Sensing defeat, the Labour leader yesterday performed a U-turn and told his MPs he was now backing an election less than 24 hours after ordering them to block one. Mr Corbyn last night said

Labour would launch ‘ the most ambitious and radical campaign for real change that our country has ever seen’.

But veteran Labour MP Barry Sheerman said it was ‘sheer madness’ to hold an early election.

Fellow Labour MP Kevan Jones said: ‘I will not be backing an election under any circumstan­ces – it’s playing right into Boris Johnson’s hands.’ Another Labour MP said: ‘It is mad that we are backing this. We are going to get stuffed.’

Labour MPs made a last-ditch attempt to wreck the election bid by trying to extend the vote to EU nationals and 16and 17-year-olds. Downing Street insisted there was not enough time to register millions of new voters.

In a significan­t interventi­on that could boost his hopes of succeeding John Bercow, deputy Commons Speaker Lindsay Hoyle ruled that the amendments should not be debated.

Downing Street is confident that Mr

Johnson can return a ‘workable’ majority in December, despite being foiled in his ‘do or die’ pledge to take Britain out of the EU by October 31.

Senior Tories point to a run of opinion polls giving the Conservati­ves a doubledigi­t lead. Polling also suggested that Mr Corbyn is the most unpopular opposition leader of all time.

But polling expert Sir John Curtice yesterday warned that Britain could be on course for another hung parliament, in what could be the most unpredicta­ble election of modern times.

Professor Curtice said: ‘I will make a prediction. There are going to be a record number of non-Conservati­ve and nonLabour MPs as a result of this election. That makes it difficult for the Tories and Labour to win an overall majority.’

Some Tory MPs voiced disquiet at the decision to push for a snap election rather than pressing ahead with delivering Mr Johnson’s new Brexit deal.

Senior backbenche­r Simon Hoare said: ‘What are we to say to constituen­ts and others about the fact that we may be able to find time for a five- to six-week general election campaign and then the rigmarole of forming a Government and yet not for bringing back the Withdrawal Bill?’

Damian Green, convenor of the One Nation group of Tory MPs, said the ‘sensible course of action, which, frankly, voters on all sides would expect of us’ was to press ahead with putting the deal into law rather than pushing for a general election.

TOs some extent,’ wrote Boris Johnson in his book about his hero Winston Churchill, ‘all politician­s are gamblers with events. They try to anticipate what will happen, to put themselves on the “right side of history”.’

Well, now Mr Johnson himself has rolled the dice. It’s easy to see why he did it, of course. Nobody will mourn the end of this Zombie Parliament, full of MPs who were only too happy to tell us what they were against, but never what they were in favour of.

We need a government that can govern, and we badly need an end to Brexit. even so: what a gamble! If things go wrong, we could wake up with Jeremy Corbyn as Prime Minister, John McDonnell running Britain’s finances, Diane abbott in charge of the police and security services, and emily Thornberry representi­ng this country abroad — the ultimate Nightmare Before Christmas.

On paper, you can see why Mr Johnson was so keen to go for it. Most polls give the Conservati­ves a double- digit lead, while his personal lead over Jeremy Corbyn is more than 20 per cent.

having shown commendabl­e decisivene­ss since becoming PM, Mr Johnson has a clear plan for leaving the eU with a deal, whereas Labour’s Brexit strategy is almost laughably vague.

So it is easy to see how events might play into Mr Johnson’s hands.

The Remain vote splinters between Labour and the Lib Dems. Floating voters are repelled by Mr Corbyn’s weakness and extremism. The Brexit Party’s supporters drift back to the Tories. and at the end of it all, the Prime Minister strolls back into No 10 with a handsome majority. Job done.

This, at any rate, is the future according to Mr Johnson’s pocket Machiavell­i, Dominic Cummings, who mastermind­ed the Leave campaign in 2016.

In Mr Cummings’s scenario, dozens of working-class Leave constituen­cies will turn Tory for the first time in living memory, more than compensati­ng for any losses to the Lib Dems.

But in politics, as in life, things rarely work out as planned. and for all the talk of Mr Cummings’s strategic genius, I can’t help noticing that many of his wheezes have proved to be total disasters.

The prorogatio­n of Parliament, for example, was supposedly a tactical masterstro­ke that would prove Mr Johnson’s mettle as a ruthless Prime Minister. In reality, though, it was a constituti­onal shambles, uniting Remainers in opposition before it was ignominiou­sly struck down by the Supreme Court.

and although I am delighted to see the back of this preening, pointless Parliament, there is a risk that Mr Johnson’s gamble might turn out to be a terrible own goal.

We have, after all, a very recent precedent for an invulnerab­le PM calling an early election with a commanding lead, looking forward to hoovering up Leave voters, and then watching in horror as the whole thing exploded in her face.

Boris Johnson is very different from Theresa May, of course. as a tried and tested Tv performer, accustomed to the spotlight after years as Mayor of London, he is a much better campaigner. (Indeed, he could hardly be worse.)

But I can’t help noticing that the opinion polls give him a smaller share of the vote than the 42 per cent Mrs May won in the actual election two-and-a-half years ago. Can he really be so certain he will succeed where she failed?

I struggle to think of any recent election that has been shrouded in such agonising uncertaint­y. Will Mr Johnson win support for his decisivene­ss, or lose them for his rackety private life?

Will Remainers rally to Jeremy Corbyn? Will it be a second referendum in all but name? and which will matter more: austerity or allegation­s of anti-Semitism? The answer, if we are being honest, is that nobody knows. This is what makes the election impossible to call. Does history offer any guide? One worrying lesson for the Prime Minister is that the British people usually resent being dragged to the polling stations, and rarely reward the politician­s responsibl­e. Mrs May learned that the hard way in 2017.

anecdotal evidence suggests that even though winter elections make little difference to turnout — 1923 and 1974, for example — many people are very unhappy at the thought of a general election just before Christmas.

Indeed, for most sane people, the prospect of popping into Santa’s Grotto and finding, say, Jacob

Rees-Mogg, emily Thornberry or anna Soubry lurking behind the beard is simply too ghastly to contemplat­e.

The ‘coupon’ election of December 14, 1918, was held after the end of World War I. The Tories agreed a pact with David Lloyd George’s Coalition Liberals, with approved candidates brandishin­g a letter of endorsemen­t, or ‘coupon’. The coupon parties won a landslide, with more than 50 per cent of the vote and 509 seats between them.

Could today’s Tories strike a similar arrangemen­t with Nigel Farage’s Brexit Party? It seems very unlikely, since Mr Farage has already made clear his contempt for Mr Johnson’s Brexit deal.

and even if the two parties quietly agreed local arrangemen­ts, it could drive moderate voters into the arms of the Lib Dems or even Labour. That might leave Mr Johnson with the worst of all worlds: winning some Leave voters in Labour stronghold­s, but not enough to counteract his losses in the middle- class suburbs and university towns.

What an irony, if Nigel Farage’s contributi­on to history is to put Jeremy Corbyn into Downing Street and to destroy any chance of Brexit at all. Stranger things have happened, mind you.

That 1918 was a one- off, and other December elections offer less rosy precedents. In December 1910, for example, herbert henry asquith went to the country in a desperate attempt to break the stalemate in a deadlocked Commons. This sound familiar? But the impasse remained.

The Liberal-Tory balance merely shifted from 274-272 to 272-271. If a similar thing happened, we would be back to where we started.

AT that point, pressure for a second referendum might become unstoppabl­e — a disaster for British democracy.

an even more worrying precedent is December 1923. That winter, Conservati­ve PM Stanley Baldwin — who, like Mr Johnson today, had only been in office since the summer — went to the polls to win a mandate for his policy of putting tariffs on foreign imports.

his gamble backfired completely, with the number of Tory MPs falling from 344 to just 258.

as a result, Labour’s Ramsay MacDonald formed a minority administra­tion, the first socialist government in Britain’s history.

There is, perhaps, an omen there for Jeremy Corbyn.

It is true, of course, that the

December 2019 election will take place in an utterly different political, social and cultural landscape. But that only adds to the overwhelmi­ng uncertaint­y.

Never in living memory has the context seemed so chaotic.

The Tories may field some candidates who were recently stripped of the party whip for opposing a No Deal Brexit. It is not yet clear what one of those — ex-Chancellor Philip hammond who’s busy touring Tv and radio studios to attack his government — will do.

Labour remains riven from top to bottom. Not only are dozens of MPs openly appalled by their own leader, under whom the cancer of anti-Semitism has seeped deep into the party’s culture, but they have no clear Brexit position.

Meanwhile, the Lib Dems have their fourth leader in less than five years in the untested Jo Swinson, who has yanked her party into the extreme ultra-Remain position of wanting to revoke article 50 and scrap Brexit completely.

It’s pretty rich, too, for them to have been clamouring for an early election when they insisted on the Fixed-term Parliament­s act, which had stipulated there should not be another election until 2022.

In Scotland, the SNP seem certain to win a colossal majority, with the Tories and Labour facing

a wipeout. The Greens will almost certainly pile up votes in university towns — but will they take more from Labour or the Lib Dems?

Also in this chaos, London seems certain to be a Labour stronghold, although the Lib Dems’ Eurofanati­cism might make a difference. And what about all those Leave-voting seats in the North and Midlands? Are they really about to turn Tory, as Mr Johnson’s strategist­s hope?

Or will ancestral loyalties kick in, with working-class voters returning to the Labour fold?

Crucially, too, can Boris Johnson repair his reputation among women voters, given concerns about his chequered love-life? Will Mr Corbyn escape his own reputation for supporting terrorists, Communists and racists?

How all this will play out, none of us can say. Perhaps the biggest factor may be the campaign itself itself. Once the election gun is fired, even the most meticulous calculatio­ns buckle under the pressure of events, as Mrs May found.

Inevitably, the party leaders will come under pressure to hold televised debates. With one gaffe, either Mr Johnson or Mr Corbyn could easily sink their chances. Yet can either afford to duck the challenge, as Mrs May did to her cost?

The Labour leader may be adrift in the polls but this is his last chance of power. He loves nothing better than haranguing crowds of loyal supporters; and as the last election proved, he is perfectly capable of raising his game once he is on the road.

By contrast, Mr Johnson — supposedly such a popular campaigner — can expect a bruising ride. Few Prime Ministers of modern times have provoked such visceral hatred in their opponents opponents, and Labour activists will be primed to harass him wherever he goes, shrieking about austerity, cuts and homelessne­ss.

If he skulks behind his media minders, he will be accused of cowardice. But if he ventures out on the streets, he risks the evening TV news being dominated by film of his shouting critics. The brutal truth is that Mr Johnson cannot expect to control the political narrative. He may tell us that this is a ‘ Brexit election’ and insist it’s a clear choice between decision and delay.

But elections never work out simply. As soon as the campaign begins, the focus will turn to the classic bread-and-butter issues of the economy, housing, schools and the NHS. And after ten years in office, the Tories will need compelling answers, as well as clear, constructi­ve plan plans for the next five years. years

In my more pessimisti­c moments, I can’t help thinking of our last winter election, the ‘Who Governs?’ campaign of February 1974.

Then, as now, a controvers­ial Tory PM went to the country asking for a mandate for decisive action in the national interest.

Then, it was Edward Heath, who urged voters to back him against the striking National Union of Mineworker­s. But Heath lost control of the election debate.

Besieged by public anxieties about housing, the economy and the cost of living, the Tories ended up haemorrhag­ing votes to the Liberals. The election produced a hung parliament and a deeply divided Labour Party took over, under the ageing but neverthele­ss victorious Harold Wilson.

I doubt I’m alone in finding that a chilling precedent. For if today’s Tories think it could never happen again, they are deluding themselves. And given the state of today’s Labour Party, the stakes are even higher now.

Whatever his faults, Wilson was a patriot, who always tried to put Britain first. No fair- minded observer would ever say the same of Jeremy Corbyn.

So we come back to Boris Johnson’s great gamble with history.

It is true that all great politician­s are risk-takers. To be a politician in the first place, you stake your career on the whims of innumerabl­e individual voters, whose hopes and anxieties are often clouded by mystery. And the higher you climb, the higher the stakes.

But rarely in modern times has any prime minister taken such a gamble. My goodness, it had better work.

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 ??  ?? Scowling: Jeremy Corbyn yesterday
Scowling: Jeremy Corbyn yesterday
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