The Daily Telegraph - Saturday

Only serious corrective action can now stop the Tory plane crashing

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THE lights have been flashing red on the Conservati­ve Party’s flight deck for some time now. On Friday morning, a few more lit up. The plane is spinning to the ground fast. Some of the crew are pulling on parachutes and getting out while they can. But the passengers are still being told: don’t worry, we have a plan, we know what we are doing. Maybe there is a plan – but is it just to carry on doing the same thing until we hit the ground?

If you had any hope that things were picking up for the Conservati­ve Party – and I must admit I have had a few glimmers of it this year – Thursday night’s by-elections will, or should, have killed that off.

The Kingswood result is roughly what you would expect from the current state of the polls – a 16 per cent swing, consistent with a heavy defeat nationally. But Wellingbor­ough is a truly terrible result. A 28 per cent swing is much, much worse than the national polls. At a national level, it means utter disaster.

Now of course by-elections are different, and both of these had special factors. It’s not obvious that choosing the partner of Peter Bone, the previous Tory MP who had been expelled from

Parliament, was the best strategy for holding on to Wellingbor­ough. And in Kingswood, Chris Skidmore’s precipitat­e departure to join the green bandwagon, and the imminent abolition of the seat itself, won’t have boosted enthusiasm. In neither place did the Tories really bother campaignin­g. So a bit of interpreta­tive caution is justified.

But you can’t hide the general picture – and it is the same as with all previous by-elections: Conservati­ve voters didn’t come out and vote. In Wellingbor­ough, Labour got the same number of votes as last time and in Kingswood, their vote actually fell by

‘When that many of our voters won’t vote for us, we won’t win elections. It’s as simple as that’

5,000. But in the latter, nearly 20,000 Tories sat on their hands as did

25,000 in Wellingbor­ough. When that many of our voters won’t vote for us, we won’t win elections. It’s as simple as that.

The other story of the night is, of course, the Reform Party. For the first time they delivered on their national poll ratings of 10-13 per cent of the vote. But they still got only 3-4,000 votes in elections where vast numbers of Tories stayed at home.

These numbers still suggest that the positive appeal of Reform to

Conservati­ve voters is quite low – and this in elections where they had two decent candidates (which, to put it charitably, won’t be the case everywhere), which weren’t about choosing the Government and accordingl­y where the “vote Reform, get Labour” slogan had little real purchase.

Reform can hamstring us, they can certainly damage us badly, but I don’t think they can get ahead of us.

I don’t want to give up on the general election. I am frightened by what the Labour coalition of antiBrexit self-righteous woke control freaks, on the one hand, and Marxists with a dash of anti-Semitism on the other, might do to our country. But we have to acknowledg­e that many voters seem less troubled. So we must do more than try to make the flesh creep and give people a positive reason to vote for us.

That brings me back to what I have been saying for the past few years: if we want the many Conservati­ves in this country to vote for us, we have to give them Conservati­ve policies and show why these fit into a Conservati­ve vision and philosophy for the country as a whole.

But time is running out now. I still hope the March budget may confound expectatio­ns, but the apparent outsourcin­g of the decision-making to the OBR doesn’t leave me optimistic.

So the plane is spinning faster; the ground is getting closer; and only serious corrective action can now make a difference.

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