The Jewish Chronicle

Tory ex-minister warns about ‘complacenc­y’

- BY LEE HARPIN POLITICAL EDITOR

FORMER TORY cabinet minister Stephen Crabb has accepted there is “in some quarters a sense of complacenc­y” about his party’s chances of victory in next month’s election.

Speaking to the JC, the parliament­ary chair of the Conservati­ve Friends of Israel group spoke of the “heavy duty” on his party to “actually win this election, for the good of the country but for the good of the Jewish community as well”.

Mr Crabb, a former work and pensions secretary, added: “I don’t think it’s an exaggerati­on at all to say that many Jewish families up and down the country are horrified at the prospect of a Corbyn-led government.”

Accepting that a similar message was put out before the 2017 election in which Theresa May secured only a narrow victory, Mr Crabb said: “There is in some quarters a sense of complacenc­y.

“What we have got to do in this election is avoid the mistakes of 2017 and go out there and convert the opinion poll lead into an actual victory.

“The 2017 campaign was riddled with errors. It was a very poorly executed campaign.

“We can not afford as a party, as a government, to make those mistakes again.”

Mr Crabb, who now begins campaignin­g to retain his Preseli Pembrokesh­ire seat, said he believed current Prime Minister Boris Johnson was “a very different kind of leader — no disrespect whatsoever to Theresa May… There is no better campaigner off the block than Boris Johnson.” Asked about growing signs of support for Jo Swinson’ s Liberal Democrat Party among some in the community, he said only the current PM would be able to “bring the country back together” and heal the rift over Brexit. “Nobody thought he was going to be the great compromise­r, they thought he was going to be the Brexit hard man,” said Mr Crabb of his leader. He added that the prospect of a hung Parliament at the election represente­d a great danger for the country. Discussing his role with CFI, Mr Crabb said the current PM was a “friend of Israel”.

He added: “If we are having an honest interview, we remain vigilant about our Foreign Office, which in my view treads far too much a neutral line. There are times we want our Foreign Office to take a stronger line.” Asked to predict the outcome of the election, Mr Crabb said: “We will return here and Boris Johnson will have a majority of 15 to 25 seats.”

 ??  ?? “Duty”: Crabb
“Duty”: Crabb

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