Scottish Daily Mail

How Operation A*** switched to Operation Elbow in plan for Scots Tory breakaway

- by Stephen Daisley

THE flaxen-haired tornado that has swept through the corridors of Westminste­r in the past 72 hours has left much political carnage in its wake. Seventeen ministers resigned or were sacked by Boris Johnson and replaced in large part by fellow-travellers committed to the hardest of Brexits, including a no-deal variation to ensure the UK departs the European Union by October 31.

A government of, by and for the Brexiteers is a comprehens­ive routing of the Tory Left, which had striven to achieve a softer Brexit. But Johnson’s triumph also registers an ultimate defeat for Operation A***, the nickname given by senior Scottish Tories to a 2018 effort to stop Johnson becoming leader.

Ruth Davidson has discovered the limits of her influence within the UK party. Her concerns about Johnson went unheeded by MPs and members. Her endorsemen­ts of Sajid Javid, then Michael Gove and finally Jeremy Hunt placed not so much as a speed bump in his path to power. Her advocacy for David Mundell to be kept on as Secretary of State for Scotland appears not to have given Johnson a moment’s pause before sacking the nine-year veteran of the Scotland Office.

Davidson, we are now told, can work with Johnson, as though she has much of a choice. She may be Scottish Conservati­ve leader but, in the end, the UK-wide head of her party is the man calling the shots in Downing Street. As revealed in Monday’s Scottish Daily Mail, there is a movement afoot to change that.

Senior Scottish Tories believe Johnson will prove so toxic to voters north of the Border – and therefore so injurious to the Union – that it would be best all-round if they broke away and formed a separate party in Scotland. In doing so, they contend, Davidson would be well-placed to defend the Union and appeal to Tory-averse voters while swiftly shoving Johnson out of the picture. Operation A*** has been replaced by Operation Elbow.

Far from the idle brainstorm­ing of backroom staff, founding a new Scottish centre party enjoys support among the parliament­ary group at Holyrood.

ASENIOR Conservati­ve MSP said: ‘There are probably two main drivers as to why this idea’s time has come. The first is that the Conservati­ve and Unionist Party that many of us joined is no longer the same party it once was. That’s not just because Boris has become leader but because, effectivel­y, the party has become an English nationalis­t party south of the Border. It’s become obsessed with Europe.

‘The recent survey saying 63 per cent of Tory members would sacrifice the Union for Brexit tells us all we need to know. That’s not us leaving the Conservati­ve and Unionist Party, it is, to reach for the inevitable cliche these days, the Conservati­ve and Unionist Party leaving us. For Scottish Tories who put the Union first, we simply have different priorities to colleagues south of the Border.

‘The second point is that Scottish politics does need a realignmen­t. The country is more or less divided 55-45 Unionist/Nationalis­t. If you’re in the 45 per cent, you are most likely to end up voting SNP. If you’re in the 55 per cent you have a choice of three parties, so the pro-Union vote is always split three ways.

‘Dislodging the SNP from government, which must always be the primary objective of Unionists, is difficult to achieve unless you consolidat­e the vote. None of the three Unionist parties is strong enough on their own to dislodge the SNP.

‘What could do that is a distinctiv­ely Scottish, centre-to-centre-Right party led by Ruth Davidson, the most popular leader in Scotland. Many people who wouldn’t vote for a Boris-led party might vote for a Ruth Davidson-led party in Scotland. Also, many

people who vote SNP do so not because they like nationalis­m but because they like a party that appears to stand up for Scottish interests, and a party that did that could win their votes.’

Another MSP said a split was ‘inevitable’, either before the 2021 election or in its wake under Ruth Davidson’s successor.

There is still every chance that Johnson and Davidson will set aside their difference­s and work together against common enemies. Misery – and the prospect of an early election – acquaints a man with strange bedfellows. Hunger for victory over Labour and the SNP isn’t the only thing the leaders share. Both are big personalit­ies and, it must be said, big egos. Both espouse a blue-collar conservati­sm that falls somewhere between the old Thatcherit­e and One Nation camps.

Both joined politics from the media and are connoisseu­rs of the camera-friendly stunt, and both are skilled, much more than most of their peers, in using humour to cut through to punters who switch off at the first hint of political chat. (There’s a reason both were hits on Have I Got News For You.) Theirs is a clash of two personalit­ies more similar than either would like to admit.

The rub is that their personal variance is really a side issue. The primary sources of Scottish Tory disquiet are Boris Johnson’s unpopulari­ty in Scotland and the potential impact of a No Deal Brexit on the electoral fortunes of the SNP and independen­ce.

The Johnson ministry faces three major challenges. It must: a) deliver Brexit by October 31, b) keep Jeremy Corbyn out of 10 Downing Street, and c) prevent Scottish independen­ce. Brexit is top priority, followed by rebuilding a polling lead over Labour (and, ideally, not squanderin­g it when the next election comes).

These two matters dominated Johnson’s campaign; the future of the Union was only occasional­ly spoken of and he seldom ventured to the far side of the Tweed.

Even if he defies the experts and pulls off a successful Brexit and buries Corbynism in the process, neither guarantees his government will find favour in Scotland.

When it comes to rejecting successful prime ministers, Scotland has form. Margaret Thatcher was responsibl­e for the rewriting of many an economics textbook but as she was forced to concede in her memoirs, ‘there was no Tartan Thatcherit­e revolution’.

The difference between 1980s Scotland and Scotland now sits at the foot of the Royal Mile. The Scottish parliament, far from ‘killing nationalis­m stone dead’, gave the SNP a platform and resources to undermine the Union. It could only oppose Mrs Thatcher as a glorified pressure group; it will be able to confront Johnson and his No Deal Brexit as the Scottish Government.

If Johnson proves to be a Thatcher-like hate figure in Scotland, the SNP could reframe independen­ce from a leap in the dark to an escape hatch, and finally convince a majority of Scots of the need to leave the Union. Westminste­r could deny another referendum but that might only harden support for separation and even lead to a Catalan-style stand-off.

To advocates of a new party (names such as ‘The Progressiv­es’ and ‘The Unionists’ come up), theirs is the best way to avoid this eventualit­y.

HOW would it work, though? The two models regularly cited are Germany and Canada. In Germany, the main centre-Right party, the Christian Democratic Union, operates a pact with the Christian Social Union; the CDU contests 15 of Germany’s 16 states but gives the CSU a free run in its historic stronghold Bavaria.

However, the parties function essentiall­y as one in the Bundestag and remain in coalition whether in government or opposition.

Others prefer the approach taken by Canadian Tories to their own nationalis­t-bedevilled province. My senior MSP said: ‘We have 13 MPs who like being in the Conservati­ve and Unionist Party, and why shouldn’t people in Scotland have the option of voting for Boris Johnson?

‘So why not look to Quebec, who have had similar constituti­onal issues to us in recent decades. The Conservati­ve Party of Canada don’t fight provincial elections there; historical­ly, the Quebec Liberal Party swallowed up the Tory vote.’

Another potential model is Australia’s centre-Right Coalition, a permanent alliance of the Liberal Party, which mostly contests urban and suburban electorate­s, and the National Party, which focuses on regional and rural Australia. Since the Second World War, the split has kept the Right wing in power almost twice as long as the Labor Party.

Although split advocates advance different models, there is broad consensus on several points. First, ‘The Progressiv­es’ would seek a non-aggression pact with the UK Tories in which the former only contested Holyrood and council elections, while the latter stood for Westminste­r.

Second, no one is concerned about funding, mainly because they would expect interest from the business community in a moderate, pro-Union party, but also because the Scottish Tories are in a healthy financial position compared to the UK party.

A source points out: ‘Very recently, it was the Scottish Conservati­ve Party that was bailing out London when they weren’t able to pay staff salaries. Around Easter time, when all Central

Office money dried up, they had to ask the Scottish Tories for a loan.’

Third, the fluid nature of UK politics is thought to make a new party more viable than before. ‘The Brexit Party proved that you can win a national election from a standing start in six weeks,’ said one MSP who spoke to me.

Another senior insider, who is cautiously supportive of a breakaway, raised crucial questions for those hoping to bring this project to fruition. This key figure said it was ‘clear there is a demand out there for a party that is seen as pro-Scottish and pro-UK’ but added that ‘as we learned with Change UK, you can’t go into radical changes like this half-cocked’.

The source said a new party would have to unite rather than further split the pro-Union vote and indicated a Holyrood-only split could be the answer.

Conversati­ons with party figures in both parliament­s throw up an obvious divide between the Holyrood group, where sympathise­rs are to be found, and MPs at Westminste­r, where a frosty reception awaits the idea. Objections range from a wish to preserve party structures, to the apparent hypocrisy of a party which opposes Scotland’s independen­ce from Westminste­r while insisting on its own.

Aberdeen South MP Ross Thomson, a vocal supporter of the new Prime Minister, said: ‘If we cannot demonstrat­e in practice that it is better to be part of something bigger, to pool and share our resources across the UK party and that there’s more we can achieve together, how can we seriously have any credibilit­y going to the electorate telling them Scotland is better off in the United Kingdom when we’ve just separated from our party?

‘In 2011 we had a long and in-depth debate on this very issue. The whole premise of the leadership campaign at that time was on separating and creating a new party. That proposal was heavily defeated and Ruth won a mandate because breaking our party apart is anathema to our grassroots members and rightly so. The colour and make-up of government­s and administra­tions are temporary but the Conservati­ve and Unionist Party has been around for 185 years. We are the most successful political party in British history and that is something worth protecting and promoting, not throwing away because some elected members have a personal grievance with our new Prime Minister.’

THOMSON said he accompanie­d Boris Johnson on a visit to Aberdeen and the ‘incredible’ welcome voters gave him showed ‘he has a stardust no other politician has’.

Opposition to a split among the MP group is not seen as too much of an impediment among proponents. ‘If the blockage to this idea is the opposition of MPs, Boris calling an early election might remove that issue,’ my senior MSP says, waspishly.

A more stubborn blockage is Davidson herself. As Ross Thomson alluded to, she won the leadership by arguing against this very idea. When the prospect was raised in an interview, she said a breakaway party ‘is not something I have ever supported, I

don’t support and I wouldn’t support in the future’.

That’s the problem with Davidson: she’s not just a Tory, she’s a conservati­ve. She is instinctiv­ely sceptical of radical change. But she has beaten tactical retreats from previous lines in the sand and the question is whether Boris or Brexit or both will force her to do so again. The threat of Jo Swinson – dubbed the Lib Dems’ ‘pretend Ruth’ by one Tory – might also become a factor.

Becoming head of a broad-based pro-Union party could pave the way for Davidson to clinch the keys to Bute House in 2021. Even then, her old-fashioned Tory patriotism would probably get the better of her personal ambition.

What, though, if the stakes were higher? What if Brexit and Borisism began to shift Scottish public opinion in favour of independen­ce? Then Davidson would have to decide whether her higher loyalty belonged to the Union or a party that was now imperillin­g its very existence. Whatever her choice, leading figures in her party have already made theirs, and are waiting for their leader to catch up with them.

 ??  ?? No love lost: Ruth Davidson has admitted she is not a big supporter of Boris Johnson
No love lost: Ruth Davidson has admitted she is not a big supporter of Boris Johnson

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