Yorkshire Post

Giving Tory grassroots more power risks split, says Hague

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BENDING LEADERSHIP rules in favour of Boris Johnson would risk “swamping” the Tory party with entryists and causing longterm damage, Lord Hague has warned. Writing for the Daily Telegraph, the South Yorkshire-born former party leader said the grassroots should not be given too much say in a leadership vote, which could risk a Jeremy Corbyn-style split.

Currently, only two leadership candidates go to a final vote, a rule set under Lord Hague’s leadership, but activists want any MP with the support of 20 colleagues to go through.

He compared the idea to Labour’s rule changes of 2015, when opening up its membership led to a surge in hard-left supporters and the election of Jeremy Corbyn, which he said left democracy “fundamenta­lly weaker”.

Lord Hague, a former foreign secretary and North Yorkshire MP, said the change would help Mr Johnson, “who is currently thought to be more popular with the party members than with parliament­arians”.

But he warned it would put too much power in the hands of Tory activists, who he says “are often the first to point out that they are not remotely representa­tive of society at large or even of their voters”.

He highlighte­d a call by Leave. EU, a hard Brexit campaign group, for its supporters to “flood” the Conservati­ve Party to ensure a “true Brexiteer” like Mr Johnson becomes prime minister.

Lord Hague’s reform gave party members the deciding vote in a leadership contest for the first time. He said he had hoped the rules would lead to the revival of the Conservati­ve grassroots but had been proved “spectacula­rly wrong” after membership of the party halved to its current level of 124,000.

“A small membership is then at risk at any time of being swamped by a sudden influx of new recruits – the very thing that happened in Labour in 2015,” he said.

“Having not thought to include the three-month membership requiremen­t in their own new rules and having all candidates put to the whole party, Labour’s former leaders inadverten­tly produced the leadership of Jeremy Corbyn, complete with extremism, antiSemiti­sm, divisivene­ss and the impossibil­ity of removing him.

“The result of what might be thought of as a more perfect and open democracy in Labour is that British democracy as a whole is now fundamenta­lly weaker.”

A small membership risks being swamped by new recruits. Lord Hague, former leader of the Conservati­ve Party

 ??  ?? LORD HAGUE: His reforms gave party members the deciding vote in a leadership contest.
LORD HAGUE: His reforms gave party members the deciding vote in a leadership contest.

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