Scottish Daily Mail

Don’t betray the Red Wall

- Ruth Sunderland BUSINESS EDITOR

REMEMBER the red Wall? rather like brexit, the seismic shift in UK politics – when traditiona­lly Labour seats in the North and midlands fell to the Tories in the election a few months ago – has been eclipsed by the coronaviru­s.

boris Johnson cannot afford to forget these supporters, particular­ly in the strange political and economic landscape that has emerged along with the pandemic.

Virus or no virus, the Tories need to deliver on their promise to bring back prosperity to the regions. To do this, they need a proper industrial strategy that will promote advanced manufactur­ing and innovation.

Above all, they must help the young, whose prospects are most at risk, to make their way into good jobs, with tax breaks for employers taking on recruits, for instance.

Scenes on sun-drenched beaches in the past few days suggest some of us have seized on the pandemic to take a long holiday at taxpayer expense. What a fool’s paradise. You can bet that is not the mood in Derby, where the townspeopl­e have learned that the major employer, aero engine-maker rolls-royce, is planning thousands of redundanci­es. This represents not only a loss of jobs, but of opportunit­y for youngsters striving for a coveted apprentice­ship.

It’s also bad news for the Tories, who took local Labour seats in the election including Derby North, High Peak, and Dennis Skinner’s old constituen­cy of bolsover.

barrow-in-Furness in Cumbria is another Labour stronghold that swung to the Tories in December. The major employer there is the submarine yard of bAe Systems, which is protected from the full extent of the economic slump by its military importance.

but barrow, which scores high on most measures of deprivatio­n, has been hit by Covid-19 with a very high rate of infection.

Places like the TS3 postcode in my birthplace, middlesbro­ugh, which includes some of the poorest parts of town with many already unemployed, have suffered extremely high mortality rates.

If the Government is not careful, one unwanted side-effect of Covid-19 is that inequaliti­es, far from being levelled out, could become more firmly entrenched.

That would be a disaster for the Tories, who must also now contend with a more credible Labour leader, having had it easy with the ludicrous Jeremy Corbyn.

If the virus results in another hit to manufactur­ing and jobs in the North, people who defected from Labour to the Tories may start to regret their choice.

As the Conservati­ve mayor of Tees Valley, ben Houchen, told me, the ‘never trust a Tory’ mindset is not far beneath the surface in Labour heartlands such as the North east. Some cynical unions are even creating a narrative of callous politician­s conspiring with rapacious bosses to make people work in peril of their lives to shore up profits.

THIS does not bear a moment’s serious examinatio­n. Of course there are some rogue bosses out there, but britons no longer toil in a world of Dickensian cruelty. We have rights with a capital r.

but the fact that this nonsense is gaining currency should remind the Tories not to take for granted their new friends in the North. measures needed include tax breaks for r&D and green tech, freeports and targeted help to attract big employers.

Johnson came to power with a once-in-ageneratio­n opportunit­y to wipe out the Conservati­ves’ toxic image in the North. He will never achieve this if he allows manufactur­ing to buckle under the virus.

If the Tories squander this chance, they will not easily be given another.

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