The strange exile of the non-novice Tories


11:05 pm - December 13th 2008

by Sunder Katwala    


Tweet       Share on Tumblr

Imagine that you are the proverbial Martian just landed on planet Westminster. You find yourself called upon to advise David Cameron, Leader of Her Majesty’s Opposition, as part of his commendable efforts to increase the diversity of his party, on how his party can recover the political momentum.

The leader is charm personified and looking forward to your out of this world ideas. But the briefing on current party policy is over in a couple of minutes. So you ask an old friend – John Redwood has offered – to make a few introductions so you can get up to speed on the talent available to the party.

Eureka! How quickly you see some simple steps which could help the Conservatives can get back in the political game.

George Osborne is not – you surmise – at the height of popularity and public confidence, even if some of the Bullingdon Club jollity get a little lost in translation. But there is such a contrast with the jovial, popular and experienced ex-Chancellor Ken Clarke that he should surely take Osborne’s place so the party can take the fight to the government on the economy.

More troubling is the awe your new friends feel whenever anybody mentions the return of the ‘Prince of Darkness’. Given the enormous power they attribute to this mysterious Mandelson, how can they conquer this fear?

You find this puzzling. You can not be the first to notice that there is a well known Conservative who has run a winning General Election campaign for his party, held several senior Cabinet roles and has high-level experience, contacts and prestige in international government which stand comparison with Peter Mandelson.

Step forward Chris Patten – former EU foreign policy supreme, ex-governor of Hong Kong; Environment Secretary before the issue became fashionable having also demonstrated low political cunning in John Major’s tax bombshell mugging of Neil Kinnock in 1992 (though there may have been some Faustian justice in the loss of his own seat in Bath).

Patten is, at 64, younger than Vince Cable and not much senior to Jack Straw. He is fully six years younger than Michael Howard was when leading his party at the last General Election. While Mandelson has returned early from Europe to join the Brown government, Patten presides over Oxford University and pens books on global politics aimed rather more at informing general public debate than his own party even as it claims to be preparing seriously for power.

Surely his party’s need is greater. It is time to get these heavyweight non-novice voices back on board, and give Britain’s most experienced senior Tory in international affairs a frontline role.

You are proud of your work. Perhaps a peerage and a place on the frontbench will follow, particularly given what David Cameron said to you about how he will show Barack Obama who really represents political change. Yet, as you announce your triumph, it is greeted not with congratulations but with glum faces.

‘This is illogical, Mr Redwood’, you say, hoping that he will help you to convince his fellow Earthlings.

But he just shakes his head and mutters: ‘No chance: Its Europe, you see”.

Chris Patten’s unparallled foreign affairs expertise will stay on the shelf – because his strong belief in constructive engagement in the European Union makes him anathema to many Conservatives.

Peter Mandelson and Gordon Brown can get back together, and Barack Obama can entrust Hilary Clinton with leading his global policy. But it seems that the Tory schism over Europe was much deeper still.

You begin to hear tales of a civil war beyond anything Alpha Centuri has ever seen. How it made it impossible for John Major to govern – and how the last Conservative Prime Minister was reduced to making a dramatic mid-campaign public plea to his own party not to undermine his leadership and ‘tie his hands’ in international negotiations.

The civil war is over, because the sceptics won it. I have heard younger Tory prospective candidates speak of Patten as one of a handful of remaining ‘dinosaurs’ – somewhat in the style of how the most loyal of New Labour acolyte circa 1996 might have dismissed Derek Hatton or Arthur Scargill. They stress how effective ‘sceptic mobilisation at the constituency level had chased and organised the few remaining pro-EU enthusiasts out of the next generations of the parliamentary party. Recent candidate surveys back up the claim that Clarke and Patten’s strand of broadly Christian Democratic politics – which is absolutely central to the mainstream centre-right across Europe – has all but disappeared from British Conservatism’s next generation.

The resulting dominance of Tory Euroscepticism is not much of a political problem in opposition. But we are beginning to see how it would have deeper consequences were the party in government again.

Absurdly, as we enter a year in which multilateral cooperation will be essential on both the global economy and on a deal on climate change, the Conservative Party is engaged on ConservativeHome in a heartfelt theological debate about whether and how to complete its plans to divorce the parties of Angela Merkel and Nicolas Sarkozy in the European People’s Party pan-European umbrella group of the mainstream centre-right.

The project of finding six or seven centre-right parties, who are not mad or xenophobic, but who wish to leave the main centre-right grouping has clearly failed, though there was one possible taker in Prague. Many now think the Tories will choose to sit alone without any EU allies at all – even as their own MEPs warn that this would give them less influence than UKIP (and indeed strengthen the Social Democratic centre-left over the centre-right).

“Ourselves alone” (‘Sinn Fein’ if you would prefer it in Gaelic) is rather a strange Tory response to the multi-polar world.

But David Cameron has never challenged his own party over Europe. He has stressed only the presentational message that it is dangerous to be seen to be ‘banging on’ about Europe, while throwing a few tasty scraps to the sceptics. He has been much sketchier when it comes to the contentful question of what the new Tory policy towards the EU would be, One Tory MEP has told me he is hopeful that Cameron ‘is much more Eurosceptic than anybody thinks’.

If David Cameron is a man with a plan to manage these tensions, he has yet to share it. The estrangement and political exile of Chris Patten could symbolise of the broader price to be paid when it comes to the grown-up governance of Britain.

But perhaps there is some other planet where that makes sense.

  Tweet   Share on Tumblr   submit to reddit  


About the author
Sunder Katwala is a regular contributor to Liberal Conspiracy. He is the director of British Future, a think-tank addressing identity and integration, migration and opportunity. He was formerly secretary-general of the Fabian Society.
· Other posts by


Story Filed Under: Blog

Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.


Reader comments


I suspect the ideal arrangement the Tories want with Europe is a free trade agreement – the EU getting access to our market and us getting access to theirs but without the “nuisances” like CAP, social chapter, common external tariff etc.

They may *want* that, but they ain’t ever going to get it. The choices are 1) stay outside the EU altogether, with no free-trade agreement 2) join EFTA, be bound by almost all EU legislation, but move from being the second-most influential country on EU legislation to having no influence at all.

3. douglas clark

Great stuff Sunder.

It has always struck me that Tories are the Borg. But without their cultural diversity.

4. douglas clark

Or Daily Mail readers as Daleks, running their brains on the same continual loop. ‘Exterminate, exterminate’. They would do well as lowly council officials dealing with wasps. As the great Wikipedia says:

The resulting creatures are a powerful race bent on universal conquest and domination, utterly without pity, compassion or remorse (as all of their emotions were removed except hate).

They are probably the sort of folk that signed the Euston Manifesto.

One of the things that has always puzzled me is that while Conservatives , like me , are fascinated with the shenanigans of the Labour Party , the reverse is not true . Perhaps it is because familiarity with leftish nostrums is a prerequisite for any cultural life such is their pre-dominance in metropolitan circles . I ,for example, often read the Guardian and enjoy the New Statesman. The splenetic socialist thumbing his Toynbee ferociously on the train would be more likely to burn the Telegraph and looks only inward.
Sunder , in common with many other Marxist day dreamers has mixed misunderstanding with wish fulfilment in what is nonetheless a very interesting article admitting ,as it does , that there is anyone outside the doctrinal iron curtain at all.The wish for a return of the debilitating Euro rows of the Major period and beyond is a pipe dream though.

The origins of this disagreement are a commitment to laissez fair trade and conservative foreign policy set against being the Party of the Nation. The argument has been resolved not only in the Party but in the country as the global economy has revealed the EU to be protectionist. Its catastrophic ( £5000 per home ) cost , its illegitimacy anti democratic nature and increasingly socialist bent has further alienated all but a very few Conservatives and the British . Perhaps more importantly at its inception the Constituency Parties were often run by people who had actually fought in the last war where only a strong nation could we stand against the Euro stateless and preserve of freedom . To give away the nations birthright was to such people a viscerally felt wrong which , of course , a Sunder or a Hundall , would laugh at …ha ha . The argument now is whether ,as John B appears to suggest we dare regain the democratic rule of our own country and risk the pathetically unlikely event of the Germans abandoning their largest export market on the say so a a few piffling bureaucrats who themselves are a parasitic waste of time .Tough one

I somehow doubt ( which is to say I find the suggestion fatuously ignorant ) it but at al events there are many markets and many people to supply such items in their stead . What a Sunder and a Hundall will not grasp is that all Conservatives act in the best interests of this country first and foremost.. There never was an internationalist dream to submerge this nation only a tactic to enrich it Now the Labour Party have lied as have the Liberals and are quite obviously conspiring to thwart the clear wishes of the people.
If I were them I would be keeping very quiet about plotting with socialist foreign allies to impose unwanted restrictions on a people who detest their arrogance and suspect outright betrayal. Chris Patten would be welcome to assist Ken Clarke certainly will which knocks this hopeful little wish into a cocked hat .

Fun , miles off target but definitely a vastly better article than most on this site . Enjoyable to disagree with

“They may *want* that, but they ain’t ever going to get it.”

Why not?

Switzerland seems to have a similar arrangement.

[troll]
It has always struck me that Tories are the Borg. But without their cultural diversity.

Good one ( I wish it was true .., more like herding cats ) ,

I` have no backatcha villain for Lib Con artists .After the Tribbles they probably felt they couldn’t do a lot more with comic infestations

8. Sunder Katwala

Michael Portillo makes a similar argument in today’s Sunday Times, though focusing on the necessity and apparent impossibility of bringing Ken Clarke back as Shadow Chancellor, because of Europe, rather than on Chris Patten.

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/columnists/guest_contributors/article5337744.ece

Portillo writes:

“Brown’s decision to bring back Mandelson reminds us that the Conservatives have left many of their strongest players out of their team. Kenneth Clarke, former chancellor of the exchequer, remains in the House of Commons. He has what his party’s front bench apparently lacks: “bottom”, that combination of independent-mindedness, experience and gravitas that makes people listen and trust.

There is no doubt that if he became shadow chancellor the Tories’ credibility would soar. His return to the team would wipe the smirks from Labour faces as surely as Mandelson’s reenlistment shook the Conservatives a few weeks ago. Labour could then hardly taunt the Tories as Etonian toffs, for nobody looks less Bullingdon club than Clarke.

Certainly, Cameron ought not to fear taking such a giant under his wing. The idea that being surrounded by tall poppies makes you seem smaller is the opposite of the truth. If Barack Obama is big enough to take in Hillary Clinton, why cannot Cameron reel in Clarke?

The reason is Europe”.

9. douglas clark

Newmania,

Ta.

Your line about herding cats is trademarked about atheists though.

By me.

And your backatcha was quite funny.

The Trouble with Tribbles was an unforgettable episode of Star Trek. Jesus, it was 1967!

I am old old old. But so are you!

10. douglas clark

Sunder @ 8,

I’d probably vote for Ken Clarke, if he were to stand in my constituency. He reminds me of the great politicians of the immediate past, like John Smith who seemed able to transcend party politics. It is a genuine tragedy that Smith was the leader you never had.

The Labour Party has slipped into managerialism ever since.

I call it as wrong. What say you?

11. Sunder Katwala

douglasclark,

Thanks. I agree – to a large extent – about the dangers of managerialism. One irony arising from your point is that John Smith was, until his death, usually attacked (unfairly) for being too cautious and too managerial – the politician as bank manager.

I don’t think John Smith did transcend party politics. The politician who transcended party politics was Tony Blair, especially 1994-97 or 1994-2001. That had an enormously broad appeal, and a certain lack of rootedness. Smith embodied the decent, moderate right of the Labour right (the ‘Old Right), motivated by values of public service and fairness, and a canny political operator in those causes.

I was at university when he died. I remember watching the news and tributes as they developed on TV, and buying all of the papers the next day. And what struck me at the time was how much of a reaction and a connection to John Smith there seemed to be when people engaged with his life story, his values, the response particularly in Scotland and across parties at Westminster. But the tragedy was that it also seemed to take his death to do that, outside of Labour party and political circles. I think it was a moment that offered a powerful challenge to the ‘folk memory’ caricature of Labour politics (the winter of discontent et al) which had still proved powerful in the party’s defeat in 1992.

The Labour politician who resembles John Smith (in several ways at least) is Gordon Brown, who has similar values and sometimes a similar difficulty in getting them across

So I am sceptical of attempts – whoever it is, and however much respect I have for them – to present the lost leader as the solution to escape all of the political tensions and choices we face. I think its a natural, and slightly anti-political, instinct. Good leadership and integrity do matter. Once politicians are no longer actively contesting key debates then we tend to get a more rounded picture of them: I think this applies (among many others) to Roy Jenkins as man of letters, Tony Benn as revered elder statesman and others on the Campaign Group left, and to some extent in different ways to Neil Kinnock, Roy Hattersley after electoral defeat, perhaps William Hague and IDS too.

The real answer to managerialism in politics is to realise that making a clearer pitch on values enables disagreement on substance, as it is then no longer necessary to impugn their integrity. Meg Russell argued that at length in a very good Fabian pamphlet ‘Must Politics Disappoint?’ published before the 2005 election. There is an extract which captures some of the argument here
http://fabians.org.uk/publications/extracts/commentary-politics-in-a-cold-climate

And whlle I think Ken Clarke is decent, and widely respected, I don’t think he transcends party politics either. He was a mainstream moderate Tory who was a participant in Thatcherite, but was probably more comfortable with the tonality of John Major. I agree he is widely respected and think he is deservedly so, even though some issues – notably the tobacco consultancy – do chip the image a bit.

Sunder,
the appeal of Blair was lost on me in 1999.

It was the combination of things like his Chicago speech outlining his interventionist ‘doctrine’ and the backtracking on student fees. I simply found it impossible to believe a word he said anymore.

However that’s all history now.

Chris Patten seemed to be chastened by the end of his political ambitions, but he still seems susceptible to them. Clarke on the other hand is more formidable, so he represents a threat to Cameron’s leadership. For different reasons I think Cameron should attempt to utilise their abilities to his advantage, but he would be better advised to keep their influence marginal. Major’s cabinet disembled because it couldn’t get the mix right, and I would say that this amounts to a disqualification for those ministers prominent within it.

Experience doesn’t equate to expertise: neither alone is reliable in a crisis, and insufficient levels of either can be seriously harmful.

So if we are to criticise Cameron’s team there is also plenty of cause to criticise Brown’s cabinet – I mean, Smith, Darling, Miliband, Balls, Hoon and Purnell are all pygmies!

Peter Mandelson and Gordon Brown can get back together, and Barack Obama can entrust Hilary Clinton with leading his global policy. But it seems that the Tory schism over Europe was much deeper still.

Yup, good point.

Michael Portillo is right on many things but not this . He is after all pretty old a tad bitter and not involved much with the Party nowadays . The continued hope that brother will turn on brother is , as I have tried to explain , based on a misreading of what the original disagreement was . The Conservative Party has never had people in it who wished to abolish the nation the way the Lib/Lab pact would prefer . The issues have largely dissolved .
The Conservative Path is now in the happy position of representing the people against the conspiring and mendacious political class in particular the conniving Liberals Brown and Milliband .

PS
I think John Smth and Gordon Brown are precisely similar , both Scot socialists , whose collectivist tax spend and control instincts are feared .If he did sneak in next May the hate starts day 1 .Blair had a period of good will .

Whether the British remain free to make their own laws is not a purely theological issue. Sovereignty might be worth sacrificing for some things, but we should at least hold out for a higher price, or a lower cost.

Also, from talking to politics students (not especially libertarian) from a number of European countries recently, I find that they consider Britain’s membership to be rather essential to the EU’s existence in that its form would be radically altered, and diminished, if we leave. That means we may hold some sway in reforming it if we keep up the pressure (and they really don’t want to lose us). Alternatively, if we really did leave, we may find ourselves in more open territory before too long.

16. Willy Humbold

In any case, vote YES to Free Europe at http://www.FreeEurope.info

17. douglas clark

Sunder. @ 11,

Point taken about John Smith. perhaps dead politicians would not have to have faced up to what live politiians have had to,

It is an interesting question though. Would John Smith have taken us into Iraq?

But the tragedy was that it also seemed to take his death to do that, outside of Labour party and political circles. I think it was a moment that offered a powerful challenge to the ‘folk memory’ caricature of Labour politics (the winter of discontent et al) which had still proved powerful in the party’s defeat in 1992.

Don’t agree with that

Smith was capable, I think, on his own grounds to have suceeded. Perhaps we should leave it at that:?


Reactions: Twitter, blogs




    Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.