HomeNewsOpinionUK Election: Tory collapse can be blamed on trading Burke for Rousseau

UK Election: Tory collapse can be blamed on trading Burke for Rousseau

Brexit turned the party of Edmund Burke into the party of Jean-Jacques Rousseau. That has cost the Conservatives dearly

June 19, 2024 / 15:13 IST
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Rishi Sunak
Rishi Sunak has certainly capped a lackluster premiership with an ill-timed and cack-handed campaign.

The most interesting story of the UK election campaign is not the rise of Labour — the party’s campaign is no more exciting than its leader — but the collapse of the Conservatives. One pollster, Survation, suggests the Tories could end up with just 72 seats in the 650-member House of Commons. Another, Savanta, says that they could be headed for “electoral extinction.” A party that won an 80-seat majority just five years ago may now be headed for the worst performance in its almost 200-year history.

How did the world’s most enduring right-of-center party come to the edge of catastrophe?

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One answer is poor leadership. Rishi Sunak has certainly capped a lackluster premiership with an ill-timed and cack-handed campaign. Yet the Conservatives have tried a succession of leaders with contrasting styles and philosophies. A second answer is boredom with the same party in power for so long. But the problem with the Tories is not that we have had 14 years of the same; rather, it’s been 14 years of chaos — we’ve had four distinct political regimes (David Cameron’s social liberalism, Theresa May’s compassionate conservatism, Boris Johnson’s populism and Sunak’s warmed-up Thatcherism) and a dizzying succession of office holders.

The Conservative right blames the party’s addiction to high taxing and spending (“the wets and other centrist-dad wannabes … bear full responsibility,” says the ever-reasonable Allister Heath, the editor of the Sunday Telegraph). But this ignores the fact that Liz Truss introduced a tax-cutting budget that almost crushed the economy. The Conservative left is much closer to the mark in blaming Brexit for damaging the economy and creating political chaos. But simply blaming Brexit fails to explain the nature of the harm it imposed or the best way of fixing it.