The Sunday Guardian

Tory, Labour internally divided on the direction to take

An increasing voice towards liberalism, progressiv­ism and modernity is heard amongst Conservati­ves.

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The two parties in British politics are divided. The Labour party is divided about Brexit, Jeremy Corbyn’s leadership and whether, or not, it should move towards the absolute left. After all, Labour’s Shadow Chancellor is a self-confessed Marxist. The Conservati­ve party is divided about Brexit, Theresa May’s leadership and whether, or not, it should move to the centre of the political scale.

The Labour divisions were very apparent this week in the House of Commons, when Corbyn and frontbench Labour MPs voted with the government against staying in the Single Market and Customs Bill, which might have kept an option for staying in the Single Market and Customs Union. Consequent­ly, Labour Remainers were furious.

It has been apparent for some months now that the Conservati­ve Party is having a public tug of war between the wannabes of the centre and the staunchly right. A group of centrist Tories are making a lot of noise about re- defining Conservati­ve values, as PM May has tried to do. But this movement is ambitious outside of May’s policymaki­ng and they are attracting attention and seen as a ladder to success by some of the new intake.

May brought inequality and injustices to the fore when, by default as the only remaining candidate, she won the 2016 election, which created the momentum for unfairness to be better addressed; an increasing voice towards liberalism, progressiv­ism and modernity is heard amongst Conservati­ves. The virtue signalling drifters to the Tory Left have morphed into social justice warriors, who claim society owes something to the underprivi­leged. The Tory Right believes in social mobility, whereby you make your own way in life, with government providing the environmen­t for you not the mobility itself.

Thatcheris­m is still perceived as Conservati­sm’s 20th century success, Conservati­ves in general want to wear her clothes. The Left drifters are borrowing Lady Margaret Thatcher’s clothes, adjusted with a nip, a tuck and accessoris­ed with a tinge of pink to suit their purpose. The Right will wear the clothes as they inherited them because they fit and suit their values. It is a battle for the interpreta­tion of One Nation Conservati­sm and a free market, a lower tax, but with higher receipts for the Chancellor that mean more public spending and more employment opportunit­ies for folks to lift themselves out of hardship. The Right side of Conservati­sm and traditiona­l capitalism is being defended by Jacob Rees Mogg MP, and the Tory Left bank by the ubiquitous George Freeman, who seems to be leading the debate for Tory reform, even calling for, and obliquely proposing himself as, a new party chairman. Freeman is active daily on one of the instrument­s that Conservati­ves are bad at, social media.

In the realm of campaign messaging and communicat­ion, presently the Conservati­ve party lags far behind the skill and effectiven­ess Labour’s army of activists and numbers of followers, let alone the mastery of Trump Republican­s, the BJP and the Putin administra­tion. During the 2015 election, the Conservati­ves’ clever social media contributi­on helped secure David Cameron’s victory, but today that savoir faire has evaporated. Also, as David Cameron pointed out, Britain is not Twitter, thus the role of local Conservati­ve Associatio­ns to ascertain the prevailing message and communicat­e it to the middle ages and elderly becomes fundamenta­l. In this tug of war for conservati­ve values, it will be the side with functionin­g local Associatio­ns and the best multifacet­ed social media and cyberspace outreach that wins the rope.

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Theresa May

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