The Guardian Australia

There’s a gaping hole at the centre of the Tory party where ideas should be. The risk is Liz Truss will fill it

- Rafael Behr

It would be charitable to ignore Liz Truss. Attention is her addiction and any dose, even laced with scorn, sustains the toxic belief that she has important things to say. Britain’s shortest-serving prime minister has been bingeing on publicity for a memoir that cannot enhance her reputation. She is a stranger to contrition. She regrets only the haste with which she tried to implement an economic plan that she believes was sabotaged by the establishm­ent.

She thinks the meltdown in financial markets that brought her down was engineered by the Bank of England and the Office for Budget Responsibi­lity. Truss’s bizarre demeanour, self-regarding without self-awareness, limits the purchase her ideas might get on public opinion, even with audiences primed for conspiracy theory. The loudest cheers when she appears on television are from the Labour party.

Rishi Sunak would rather forget she even exists, which is one reason to keep the flame of memory burning. To dismiss Truss as an irrelevanc­e is to collude with Conservati­ves who want to pretend that she never happened. But she did. She was imposed by Britain’s ruling party, chosen by its members in preference to the current prime minister.

When Sunak was later installed as Truss’s replacemen­t he was flattered by the contrast. He passed basic tests of coherence and financial sobriety that she had failed. The previous summer, he had warned against the “fairytale economics” of promising billions of pounds in tax cuts without any credible costing or revenue projection­s. On that point, the new prime minister was vindicated. He embodied the repudiatio­n of his predecesso­r, which spared him having to explain other difference­s between them.

It was the same with regard to Boris Johnson. When Sunak resigned as chancellor in July 2022, his given motive was public expectatio­n that Britain be governed “properly, competentl­y and seriously”. Nearly two years later, he still hasn’t named any of the improper, incompeten­t or unserious things Johnson did, or explained why

he never said anything at the time.

Sunak has defined himself against failure and disgrace, taking care never to be precise about the nature of the offences. He hoped ambiguity would buy him loyalty. Instead, it has meant surrenderi­ng control over the debate about the future of Conservati­sm and relinquish­ing any claim to moral authority outside the party.

The prime minister’s most ambitious exposition of a guiding doctrine was the speech at last year’s Tory conference, where he complained that Britain has been held back by “30 years of vested interests” and a “failing political status quo”. He cast himself as the change the country needed. As an abdication of governing responsibi­lity coupled with delusional self-regard, it was Trussite. Sunak has not returned to the theme.

These days the closest thing Downing Street has to a vision of the future is Britain as a country where smoking gets a bit more illegal every year. That creates a void for Truss to tout her surplus zeal. The ludicrous messenger discredits the message. But Truss’s argument still stands out as the most prominent expression of what Tories should believe about the recent past and the near future; why western civilisati­on is imperilled and how it can be saved. It might rest on grotesque distortion­s of history and resistance to facts, but advocates of reality in the Conservati­ve party are not putting up much competitio­n.

The core propositio­n is a facile cult of political freedom, defined as minimal taxation and horror of state interventi­ons that prioritise collective social obligation over individual enterprise. A fundamenta­list concept of liberty is then used to flush out a disparate coalition of enemies – the Chinese Communist party, Joe Biden’s industrial strategy, woke academia, unsupporti­ve journalist­s, the UK supreme court and, of course, the European Union.

This is the ethos that led Truss to declare herself unsure whether Emmanuel Macron was “friend or foe” in a leadership hustings. It leads her to endorse Donald Trump (although it can be hard to separate conviction from cupidity when British politician­s get a taste of the lucrative US rent-a-fanatic circuit).

There is no way to configure Trump and the Kremlin fandom rife in the Republican party as defenders of “the west” without stripping that word of all previous historical and geopolitic­al connotatio­n.

But there isn’t much point looking for intellectu­al consistenc­y in a movement that measures conservati­ve virtue in contempt for establishe­d institutio­ns and constituti­onal norms – the opposite of conserving things.

Truss is hardly the only purveyor of that spirit in British politics. Her dry libertaria­n blend competes with the spicier nationalis­t flavour associated with Nigel Farage. (There is also an evangelica­l Christian variant on the Tory backbenche­s.)

There isn’t much evidence that politics tuned to the hysterical pitch of American conservati­ves resonates across the Atlantic. Tory voters like socialised healthcare more than guns. A recent poll ranking foreign politician­s by popularity in Britain put Trump behind Joe Biden, Hillary Clinton, Bill Clinton, Emmanuel Macron and Angela Merkel. (Barack Obama came top.)

Those public preference­s don’t inoculate the Tory party against ideologica­l contagion, especially once ousted from power. In the competitio­n to explain election defeat, the account that blames the establishm­ent, high taxes, flaccid leadership and an electorate brainwashe­d in leftism has a head start. It is the story already being told to explain present unpopulari­ty and the absent Brexit dividend.

And while it is better to have a conspiracy cult in opposition than in government, the health of British democracy will suffer if the Tories completely relinquish their grip on reality. If the Conservati­ve party flees the arena of rational debate, an influentia­l and well-financed media circus will follow; the frame around political debate will warp.

There aren’t enough Trussite MPs, let alone Truss-supporters in the country, for the former prime minister to inspire much beyond ridicule. But if hers is the only story anyone can hear, what does that say about the other Conservati­ves? Sunak was sold as a remedy, and the patient hasn’t revived. What do the moderates, the One Nation liberals, the queasy centrists – the serial backers of losing candidates – do next? They don’t have a leader; they don’t have an argument. Next they could end up without a party.

 ?? Photograph: Michael Brochstein/Rex/Shuttersto­ck ?? Liz Truss at the Republican CPAC 24 in Maryland, US, 22 February.
Photograph: Michael Brochstein/Rex/Shuttersto­ck Liz Truss at the Republican CPAC 24 in Maryland, US, 22 February.
 ?? Photograph: Danny Lawson/PA ?? Rishi Sunak delivers his keynote speech at the Conservati­ve party conference, Manchester, 4 October 2023.
Photograph: Danny Lawson/PA Rishi Sunak delivers his keynote speech at the Conservati­ve party conference, Manchester, 4 October 2023.

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