The Daily Telegraph

Our only path to victory is through growth and Brexit

- By Penny Mordaunt

‘Only unity will keep us in office. A Labour government, or a Labourled coalition, would be disastrous. They would take us backwards’

‘Our country is at an inflection point. If we fight each other, we will fail. If we work as a team, we will succeed’

The transition from Sunday into Monday in any week is always hard. This week, though, if you’re a Conservati­ve, it was brutal. The extended weekend of celebratio­ns for the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee created warm feelings of pride and shared belief.

What a country this is when we are all unified! At the weekend, we didn’t care about our politics or our position. There was no “they”. There was only “we” . We were all just the people coming together to praise the Queen for her quiet, self-discipline. She made a vow of loyalty in her youth and she has stuck to it throughout her long life. We were proud of her. We were proud of the efforts made by our communitie­s, the Royal Marines and Paddington Bear.

And this is the point about this country. That’s the sort of thing we’re known for – competence, continuity, stability, tradition, predictabi­lity and sense of humour. Our history has always pointed the way into our future. Her Majesty stuck by the country, no matter that at one stage it meant working with a government that wanted to abolish her and the monarchy. There must have been times when she despaired of the division. She concentrat­ed on getting the basics right and that is what this government is doing.

The only path to victory at the next election lies through the arch of economic growth and our citizens being able to live well. That means a modern economic framework that promotes and enables wealth creation and opportunit­y. It means access to GPS and dentists. It means household budgets keeping pace with bills. The Prime Minister outlined his commitment to deliver on that and acknowledg­ed requests from many in his party to adjust course.

Monday brought division. It also brought a result. While the PM trims his sails, we should remember that only unity will keep us in office. The consequenc­es of a Labour government, or a Labour-led coalition, would be disastrous. Rather than modernisin­g government to move at the pace business and science require, they would take us backward. Maybe even back into the EU, on worse terms.

The opportunit­ies the electorate expects us to bring them post-brexit could have been made for the Conservati­ve Party. All that experience. All that ability. The flexibilit­y and imaginatio­n of the most successful political party in Britain, or even the world, for that matter. We have huge talent and vision on our benches and in every part of the UK. It needs to be utilised. Government must focus on vital work, and on making use of its massive majority to reform the country. For that to happen the Party must unite. What a wasted opportunit­y if it does not.

To its credit, the Party is a diverse movement with different perspectiv­es and opinions. This week those difference­s have been to the fore, but they are sincerely held.

But Conservati­ves MPS all have something in common: the trust placed in them by the electorate. We must not betray it. The nation needs us to deliver.

Monday was also the 78th anniversar­y of D-day. The brave men of that era had a common goal and realised that if they didn’t work together, they’d lose.

D-day was not only a triumph for the troops, it was also an example of what’s possible when we work together towards a common goal. I attend commemorat­ive events every year, but coming off the back of Her Majesty’s Jubilee this year it seemed particular­ly poignant. It made me think of the film This Happy Breed, which was released exactly a year before the landings. The central character, Frank Gibbons, a First World War veteran, attempted to cheer up his service-aged, bewildered, and dishearten­ed son.

He said: “I belong to generation of men, most of whom aren’t here anymore. And we all did the same thing for the same reason no matter what we thought about politics. Now that’s all over and done with and we’re carrying on, just as though nothing had happened. But as a matter of fact, several things happened, and one of ’em was, this country suddenly got tired. She’s tired now. But the old lady’s got stamina, make no mistake about that and it’s up to us ordinary people to keep things steady. And that’s your job, and just you remember it.”

Our country is at an inflection point. People have put their trust in us to deliver. If we fight one other, we’ll fail. If we work as a team, we will succeed. That is our job, and we had better remember it.

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