The Independent

Major: Zealot Brexiteers are now a party within a party

- BENJAMIN KENTISH POLITICAL CORRESPOND­ENT

Sir John Major has launched a scathing attack on “zealot” Tory Brexiteers, accusing “extreme” Conservati­ve MPs of acting as “a party within a party”.

In a move likely to fuel Tory warfare over Brexit, the former prime minister accused some members of the European Research Group (ERG) of Conservati­ve MPs of having “little or nor affinity to moderate, pragmatic and tolerant Conservati­sm”.

He said the Conservati­ves and Labour were both being “manipulate­d by fringe opinion” and claimed right-

wingers in his own party were shaping government policy “simply by being intransige­nt”. Sir John urged moderate Conservati­ve MPs to stay in the party rather than join the new Independen­t Group, insisting Tory and Labour MPs need to force their parties towards the political centre.

In a speech at the University of Glasgow, he said: “Currently, both the Conservati­ve and Labour parties are being manipulate­d by fringe opinion. The rationale for extremists joining mainstream parties is logical: from within them, they can influence policy; from without, they very rarely can. The Conservati­ve Party membership appears to be ‘hollowing out’ traditiona­l Conservati­ves, while former Ukip members strengthen the anti-European right of the party.”

In a blistering attack on Jacob Rees-Mogg‘s ERG, he continued: “In parliament, the European Research Group has become a party within a party, with its own whips, its own funding and its own priorities. Some of its more extreme members have little or no affinity to moderate, pragmatic and tolerant Conservati­sm.

“The ERG does not represent a majority view, but with a minority government – as now – can determine policy simply by being intransige­nt, which is precisely what it is doing. Some – who can fairly be called zealots – seem incapable of looking beyond the one issue of Europe. It’s not just that it dominates their thinking – it seems to obsess them.”

Sir John was speaking after eight MPs resigned from the Labour Party to form a new parliament­ary grouping. The former prime minister said he admired their “courage and their conviction” but hoped they had not “cut themselves adrift forever” because Labour needed moderate MPs inside the party. He also urged potential defectors in his own party to stay put, saying they had a “duty” to ensure the Tories “retain a mainstream majority of their own”.

He said: “When I refer to ‘the centre’, I don’t mean some amorphous new party of ‘moderates’ and ‘centrists’. Even if such a party were elected, what would unfold when it fell out of favour? For all government­s are mortal. With mainstream opinion sidelined, the country’s only choice would be between the extremes of left or right. That would be an awful outcome. Our electorate needs a choice between parties that are demonstrab­ly rational, realistic and sane.

“So, when I speak of ‘the centre’, I mean that our three main national parties – Conservati­ve, Labour and Liberal Democrat – must each retain a mainstream majority of their own.”

 ??  ?? ‘The ERG can determine policy simply by being intransige­nt,’ says ex-PM (PA)
‘The ERG can determine policy simply by being intransige­nt,’ says ex-PM (PA)

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