The Pak Banker

Sunak’s Conservati­ves face years of oblivion

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Martin Kettle

Incredible though it may seem, it is increasing­ly likely that Rishi Sunak’s Conservati­ve leadership will be challenged in June.

To many, the idea that choosing a fifth Tory prime minister in as many years might be the solution to internal party turmoil, or that ditching Sunak a few months before a general election would reanimate the electorate, will feel utterly delusional. To a significan­t group of Conservati­ve MPs and activists, however, it is a primrose path that beckons irresistib­ly.

These critics never supported Sunak in the first place. They can’t forgive him for not having Boris Johnson’s post-Brexit appeal.

They despise his caution about their obsessions. They treat his failure to dent Labour’s poll lead with contempt. They believe, probably rightly, that in the 2 May local elections Sunak may lead the Tories to a humiliatin­g defeat.

But they hope this will panic the party into yet another change of leader and a lurch to their land of lost content on the populist right.

These local elections would matter a lot in any circumstan­ces. They are not midterms, from which a defeated governing party can always hope to recover. Instead these are nearly end-of-terms.

And they tell a fateful story. The Tories are staring at the loss of more than half of their councillor­s in May, with possible defeats for prominent mayors, including Andy Street in the West Midlands and Ben Houchen in Tees Valley, and the rise of Richard Tice’s Reform party slicing into the 2019 Tory electorate.

Put that together with last weekend’s well-publicised 15,000person general election survey by Survation, and you have a party on death row. Survation’s poll forecasts for Labour a vast 286-seat general election majority, with Keir Starmer leading 468 MPs into the next parliament and the Conservati­ves reduced to a mere 98, easily their worst result of the democratic era.

A new YouGov poll puts the figure at 403 seats, with a Labour majority of 154. The combinatio­n of the dire polls and the likely local election losses is a Conservati­ve leadership tinderbox, ready to ignite

after the local election weekend.

Sunak knows this only too well. It is why, by his own rather modest standards as a stump politician, he is putting unusual effort into local campaignin­g. It is also why his threat to call a June general election rather than submit to a challenge from his MPs should be taken more seriously than it is.

The rebels certainly take it seriously, because it would kill their desperate strategy. Their hope that they can persuade King Charles to block a request from Sunak for a dissolutio­n, however, is for the birds.

Such is the party’s volatility that the leadership hopefuls know the game is already afoot. The likelihood is neverthele­ss that Sunak will cling on to the loyalty of the majority, as John Major did in similar circumstan­ces in 1995.

But that is not a certainty. In the end, his MPs and their press backers are an unbiddable crew. If 53 of his 348 MPs ask for a confidence vote, many others will cast restraint aside.

From the grandstand, this all appears like a collective suicide strategy. For many on the pitch, though, it is clearly different. Priti Patel and Suella Braverman are weighing early challenges after the local elections.

Penny Mordaunt and Kemi Badenoch do not want to be left behind if others have momentum. Nor do James Cleverly or Grant Shapps.

Liz Truss, the most discredite­d Tory of the modern era, is eyeing the scrum. Boris Johnson and Nigel Farage, though not MPs, will be drawn into the intrigue. Even Dominic Cummings is taking fresh interest.

What all of this misses, though, is something much larger. Neither the current, blundering Conservati­ve party nor the supersucce­ssful ideologica­l one about which the rebels fantasise is a viable and stable centre-right party of government.

A change of leader does not change that. To recreate an electorall­y viable party is not the work of weeks, but of years.

That’s especially the case when, as the Tory journalist Danny Finkelstei­n pointed out this week, young Tory voters are almost extinct.

Rather than pretend that ousting Sunak will solve or even do anything to mitigate the Tory party’s plight, the Conservati­ves need a dose of historical humility and to play a longer game.

 ?? ?? "They can’t forgive him for not having Boris Johnson’s postBrexit appeal. They despise his caution about their obsessions. They treat his failure to dent Labour’s poll lead with contempt. They believe, probably rightly, that in the 2 May local elections Sunak may lead the Tories to a humiliatin­g defeat."
"They can’t forgive him for not having Boris Johnson’s postBrexit appeal. They despise his caution about their obsessions. They treat his failure to dent Labour’s poll lead with contempt. They believe, probably rightly, that in the 2 May local elections Sunak may lead the Tories to a humiliatin­g defeat."

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