The Daily Telegraph

The woke blob’s final triumph is near if Britain fails to heed America’s warning

Ron Desantis has mastered the fightback against the Leftist elite in the US. The Tories must learn from him

- allister heath follow Allister Heath on Twitter @Allisterhe­ath; read more at telegraph.co.uk/ opinion

Enough is enough: the Civil Service has gone too far in its war against a Tory Government it all too often appears to despise. The odious briefings, the targeted leaks, the trouble-making, the campaignin­g against the Government’s own policies on immigratio­n, Brexit and tax: who do these people think they are?

Our Civil Service and technocrac­y has been overrated for decades, if not generation­s, but the average calibre of Whitehall and quango staff has drasticall­y declined over the past 20 years. The best companies have made huge strides in productivi­ty and technology; state capacity has deteriorat­ed in almost all respects, from pandemic management to the ability to run infrastruc­ture projects, hence the obscenity that is HS2. So much for the myth of the Rolls-royce Civil Service.

In The Road to Serfdom, published in 1944, FA Hayek argued that the “worst get on top” in collectivi­st societies. This is exactly what is happening in Britain: with a few laudable exceptions, today’s civil servants are less competent than their predecesso­rs, but have more power and an inflated sense of their own importance. Buoyed by the Blairite legal revolution that Brexit has only partly undone, and encouraged by the intellectu­al weakness of the Conservati­ve Government, their psychology has shifted dangerousl­y.

Rather than working for political masters, much of the bureaucrac­y now works with them, if not against them. The Civil Service, together with its allies in the quangocrac­y, all too often considers itself to be a separate branch of government in a Us-style system of checks and balances, with a duty to “tell truth to power” (or more precisely, to elected MPS and ministers) and to use semi-constituti­onal laws (such as the Equalities Act, net zero commitment­s, and membership of the EHRC) as tools to enforce its agenda.

The Ministeria­l Code and other codes of conduct are leveraged to stymie democracy. Labour market rules and HR wokery (with their wilful mischaract­erisation of legitimate requests and ordinary workings of hierarchic­al relationsh­ips as “bullying”) are weaponised, as in the case of Baroness Falkner, the great chairman of the equalities watchdog.

Ministers are catastroph­ically ill-equipped: they are parachuted into openly hostile department­s such as the Home Office with a handful of youthful, under-paid advisers, and immediatel­y placed at the mercy of Whitehall calendars and informatio­n flows. They can’t hire or fire, and anybody keen to take on the Left-liberal status quo is undermined by leaks and negative briefings, as we have seen in the case of Priti Patel and Suella Braverman.

It is easier for less brave or principled ministers to focus on “mastering their briefs”, as the mandarins love to put it, and become their department­s’ spokesmen. Laughably, we still have Tory cabinet ministers defending this absurd pantomime: many feel the need to endlessly thank their “brilliant” and “hard-working” civil servants. It is a form of bureaucrat­ic Stockholm syndrome.

Why can’t the Tories see through the technocrat­s’ incompeten­ce? Since Liz Truss’s defenestra­tion, Treasury and Bank of England orthodoxy have prevailed. The result? Growth is abysmal. Inflation remains far too high at 8.7 per cent, with core inflation going up, and the markets now expect interest rates to peak at 5.5 per cent. Gilt yields have surged almost all the way back to where they were during the Ldi-panic that toppled Truss. So much for the “competence” of the “sensibles”. Why is nobody now talking of a “moron premium” on UK debt? Is it because it’s taboo to call out Bank governors and Treasury officials?

One man who gets it, and who has shown how centre-right politician­s can defy the blob, is Ron Desantis, governor of Florida, who is declaring his candidacy for the Republican nomination for US president.

As it immediatel­y became obvious when I interviewe­d him, he is pioneering a new, more robust form of conservati­sm that recognises that winning elections and then tweaking a few laws isn’t enough to truly make a difference. Trump tried that, and shouted loudly, but achieved little. The Left has changed the rules of the game, and the Right must adapt or die. It has now become essential to reverse the Left-wing capture of public and private institutio­ns to truly shift the culture in a more conservati­ve direction.

Desantis controls the apparatus of state in Florida. He realises that in a modern society political power is also exercised by state-funded institutio­ns such as the universiti­es, and by the private sector via woke capital. He sees that all these Left-wing power centres need to be confronted, or else victory at the ballot box means nothing, a lesson the Conservati­ves must urgently learn if they are ever to rule again.

So how can a future Tory Britain be more like Florida? It is madness that ministers have to act as guerrilla fighters parachuted behind enemy lines – and when a prime minister must do that, as Truss did, it cannot end well. The next Tory government will need to legislate to end the Northcotet­revelyan Civil Service on its first day in office, and appoint new management teams on short-term, performanc­erelated contracts to run every single government department and quango. These new teams would report directly to ministers, and take instructio­ns from them. All would be contractua­lly bound to deliver the Government’s agenda.

A change of this magnitude would require detailed long-term planning; the Tories should use their time in opposition to work on a blueprint to take over the state, draft omnibus legislatio­n, and draw up a list of several thousand personnel to appoint, including private sector chief executives, entreprene­urs, economists, lawyers, bankers, turnaround specialist­s, management consultant­s and tech experts.

The next Tory government will also need to ensure that we end up with a drasticall­y more ideologica­lly diverse university, cultural and charitable sector. As Desantis realised, simply preventing the cancellati­on of the last remaining non-left wing holdouts isn’t enough: defeating wokery must become official policy across Government. The job of private firms should be to make money legally, not to engage in political campaignin­g. In a world where followers of Gramsci have seized control of virtually all institutio­ns, winning elections or referenda isn’t enough. The blob must be defeated.

The Left has changed the rules of the game, and the Right must adapt or die

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