The Guardian (USA)

The Guardian view on the Tory leadership race: hard truths urgently needed

- Editorial

The profusion of candidates running to be Conservati­ve leader is not a healthy symptom for the party. It speaks of panic and incoherenc­e. Eleven MPs are running, more might enter, two have already withdrawn. There is disarray over future policy direction and fear of naming the underlying problem.

It is Brexit. Under Theresa May the Tories set themselves an impossible task – exiting the EU without confrontin­g the negative consequenc­es of that decision. Inevitably they failed, but not all of them have grasped the nature of that failure. Many candidates, including the frontrunne­r, Boris Johnson, believe that Mrs May’s mistake was lack of conviction in threatenin­g to walk away from Brussels with no deal. Andrea Leadsom and Esther McVey are eager no-dealers. Willingnes­s to be that reckless has become the qualifying threshold of true belief among stalwart Brexiters. But meeting that threshold disqualifi­es a candidate from credibilit­y as a potential prime minister in the eyes of a large section of the public – probably a majority. Enthusiasm for no deal can only be sustained by ignoring every respectabl­e analysis of what such a departure would entail.

Honesty is not absent from the contest, or at least the aspiration to honesty is represente­d. Rory Stewart has made progress by describing rivals’ Brexit complacenc­y as “catastroph­ic”. Michael Gove accepts the likely requiremen­t for a further article 50 extension. Also in the category of rational judgments is Sajid Javid’s observatio­n that the Tories cannot beat Nigel Farage’s Brexit party “by becoming the Brexit party”. Matt Hancock and Jeremy Hunt note the imperative of appealing beyond the pool of leave voters, although neither has a persuasive account of how that is done.

The task of rehabilita­ting Conservati­sm as a broad church has been framed as something to be accomplish­ed after Brexit. The hardliners offer vacuous tactics for navigating the 31 October deadline. (Dominic Raab would demand removal of the backstop from Mrs May’s deal, for example, despite having tried that already as Brexit secretary and failed.) All candidates prefer to talk about what the Tory party should be once Britain is outside the EU. Some would spend more, others tax less. Ms McVey takes a reactionar­y line on teaching about samesex relationsh­ips in schools. Mr Hancock is liberal on immigratio­n. Those are normal Conservati­ve divisions but these are not normal times. The availabili­ty of resources to deliver any agenda depends on the economy, which depends on Brexit. The capacity to legislate depends on a Commons majority which will be as elusive for Mrs May’s successor as it has been for her.

Mr Stewart recognises that difficulty with his proposal for a citizens’ assembly to find a broader national Brexit consensus. Sam Gyimah alone dares to offer a referendum. That propositio­n will not get him far in today’s Tory party. And it is the members who choose the next prime minister from one of two names proposed by MPs.

That power has never before been exercised in Britain. Tory members have elected leaders before but only in opposition, never when the victor is catapulted straight into Downing Street. This is an awkward constituti­onal arrangemen­t – a hybrid of parliament­ary democracy (the ruling party owns the office of prime minister) and direct democracy (a grassroots ballot fills that office). The mandate that emerges from such a process will be unstable. The next Tory leader will fashion a programme to suit a tiny sample of the population and then impose it on the rest. That person will struggle for legitimacy.

It is a hazard that could be mitigated by generous use of honesty in the contest and by candidates having the courage to confront the Tory base with uncomforta­ble facts. That means spelling out not just the sticky parliament­ary arithmetic of Brexit but the economic and strategic reality of why total rupture with the EU is a terrible policy. Even most of the self-styled moderates flinch from that level of candour. But if none will be bold enough with the truth, the last glimmer of the Conservati­ves’ seriousnes­s as a party of government will be extinguish­ed altogether.

 ??  ?? Conservati­ve party leadership contenders. Left to right, top: Mark Harper, Rory Stewart, Jeremy Hunt, Matt Hancock. Middle: Boris Johnson, Michael Gove, Dominic Raab. Bottom: Esther McVey, Sajid Javid, Sam Gyimah, Andrea Leadsom. Composite: Various
Conservati­ve party leadership contenders. Left to right, top: Mark Harper, Rory Stewart, Jeremy Hunt, Matt Hancock. Middle: Boris Johnson, Michael Gove, Dominic Raab. Bottom: Esther McVey, Sajid Javid, Sam Gyimah, Andrea Leadsom. Composite: Various

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