The Daily Telegraph

The Tories can still turn this chaos around

Talk of this Government collapsing like John Major’s is mistaken. There is a vital difference this time

- FOLLOW Tom Harris on Twitter @Mrtcharris; READ MORE at telegraph.co.uk/ opinion TOM HARRIS

The whiff of 1997 is in the air. The Government is in chaos and scandals abound. Jeremy Corbyn is strutting the country displaying his bright plumage to prospectiv­e supporters in the hope and expectatio­n that they will give him a chance to govern. And why wouldn’t they? With the Tories split over Europe, a new minister gone every week, and the ghost of John Major waving his arms in the background, a Labour government would seem the obvious next step for Britain.

But there is one crucial difference between 1997 and 2017. During Major’s final years in government, the opposition, led initially by John Smith and then by Tony Blair, enjoyed stratosphe­ric poll leads. One poll for the Telegraph in January 1995 gave Labour a staggering 62 per cent of the vote and a lead over the Conservati­ves of 43.5 per cent. Even by May 1 1997, it had a robust 13-point lead. Today, Jeremy Corbyn’s Labour is struggling to escape the margin of error, vying with the Tories at around 40 per cent. It’s as if there is an invisible ceiling for Labour’s support. What’s going on?

There is no doubt that Labour’s fortunes have been transforme­d since the start of the general election campaign earlier this year. Then, some polls predicted the party might fall to a derisory 25 per cent. Like all political partisans, Corbyn’s optimistic army of supporters see in the electorate whatever they need to see, and they have concluded that the public loves their man. But they are giving too much credit to his personal appeal and too little to the Prime Minister herself.

Britain fell out of love with Theresa May at precisely the same speed that it became enamoured of Mr Corbyn. News coverage of his rallies left viewers with the inaccurate impression that Labour’s improving numbers were entirely due to positive reasons, rather than a dawning realisatio­n that the incumbent leader simply wasn’t up to the job.

Then there’s the inescapabl­e fact that, not so long ago, Corbyn was shoulderin­g the blame for his party’s calamitous fall in the polls following the EU referendum in 2016 – a collapse that included the worst by-election result in decades and some of the worst local election results in a generation. These were real people casting real votes, and the reasons they rejected Labour and its leader at the time were real, too.

A poll rating today of just over

40 per cent is not necessaril­y an indication that these voters’ reservatio­ns about Corbyn’s politics and his dubious past associatio­ns have been addressed. Rather, Labour’s healthy share of the vote reflects a severe polarisati­on of opinion; for every voter prepared to give Corbyn the benefit of the doubt, there is another prepared to vote tactically for the Conservati­ves in order to keep him out of Downing Street.

Indeed, Corbyn will always struggle to get away from his past. Many voters may suspend judgment on his meetings with convicted IRA gunmen while the Troubles were ongoing and his gestures of friendship towards the terrorists of Hamas. Others simply refuse to believe the historical record, or don’t care either way. But not everyone will find it so easy to overlook. Without such skeletons in his closet, would Corbyn be further ahead? Would he then be seen as a more acceptable alternativ­e to what we already have in Downing Street?

There also remains the fact that Labour is still a divided party. Few people really believe that the divisions between the so-called moderates and their hard-left bosses have been healed by the recent display of unity.

Ultimately, Blair’s advantage in 1997 was that few saw him as a real threat to the principles and institutio­ns they held dear. He was a safe option even for Conservati­ve voters to embrace – exactly the reason why so many on the Left continue to despise him. And despite the progress made by Jeremy Corbyn (much of which was down to Theresa May’s inept campaign), his motivation­s and record remain suspect to many. He is a polarising figure who repulses as many people as he attracts – often for the same reasons.

That is not necessaril­y fatal to Labour’s hope of returning to government. It does, however, provide a clear signal to the Conservati­ve Party that if they can get their act together, the future – or at least the next election – might still belong to them.

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