South Wales Echo

Deep-seated hatreds could split Tory party down middle

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IS THE Conservati­ve Party coming apart at the seams to an extent that’s beyond repair?

Never before have the Tories been involved in so much internal bloodletti­ng, turmoil and back-stabbing, brought about by the conflict over Brexit.

Hitherto, the Tories have always been renowned for their party loyalty and discretion, invariably managing to keep any problems they had under wraps.

But now, they’re doing themselves immense damage by seeming to rejoice in washing their dirty linen in public, and with a catalogue of resignatio­ns.

Do they not realise the electorate is fast losing patience?

Theresa May surely has enough on her hands in dealing with the recalcitra­nt Brussels negotiator­s, without leading a bad-tempered party more concerned with fighting each other than fighting Labour.

People always say that whatever happens, the Tory Party will always be there. But I am not so sure this time. The snarling and internal hatred is now so deep-seated that the party could split down the middle to create two opposing factions.

The idea of a Parliament without a traditiona­l Conservati­ve Party may be unthinkabl­e, but it may not be impossible.

Party officials need to act fast before disaster strikes.

The Tories’ troubles are yet another reminder that the road to Brexit gets no smoother.

It is littered with potholes, U-bends, and every other hazard and obstacle you could think of.

It is also in danger of destroying the party system at Westminste­r.

The Brussels negotiator­s seem to be squeezing every drop of blood out of the UK and the whole drama has left numerous casualties along the way. None of it a pretty sight. The irony is that when we first applied to join the Common Market, we were barred.

Now we are having difficulty getting out!

The point was starkly made by a correspond­ent to a national newspaper last week. He wrote: “Are we the only ex-member of the British Empire not to have achieved independen­ce?”

However the arrival of Dominic Raab as Brexit Secretary can be nothing but beneficial to the UK in the Government’s struggle to achieve a fair settlement to the problem. Raab is a martial arts man as well as a no-nonsense politician of considerab­le verve, and should shock the Brussels negotiator­s out of their smugness, to realise that the UK really does mean business. Raab won’t let them off the hook. A bit of table-thumping wouldn’t do any harm.

IT IS galling enough being lectured at by MPs about the virtues of equality and transparen­cy – their fancy name for open government – but it is a total outrage when the politician­s seek to exempt themselves from these “ideals” and, in fact, set themselves up as superior beings.

What this means is that those MPs facing allegation­s of fraud over their expenses, or those being accused of sexual harassment, will be allowed to remain anonymous during these inquiries. How very convenient. The brutal fact is, it is the British taxpayer who is funding MPs, not merely for their high salaries but for their expenses as well. In the private sector, the paymaster has to be kept informed of his employees’ expenses and to approve them or otherwise.

So why should not the paymasters of MPs – the taxpayers – be allowed to see how their money is being spent?

And given the scandalous­ly cavalier manner in which taxpayers’ money was being treated by many MPs, as shown in the 2009 revelation­s, it’s hardly surprising they want to keep things tightly under wraps.

But that is all the more reason why it should all be out in the open.

I was about to say that we do not traipse to the polling stations every so often, and shell out vast sums of money to create a secret society with blacked-out windows. But unfortunat­ely we do.

MPs would do well to remind themselves that they are our servants and not Higher Beings, which I suspect some of them plainly consider themselves to be.

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