{"id":317593,"date":"2021-09-19T09:01:43","date_gmt":"2021-09-19T09:01:43","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/jacobinmag.com\/2021\/09\/uk-conservatives-are-banking-on-a-losing-strategy\/"},"modified":"2021-09-19T09:01:43","modified_gmt":"2021-09-19T09:01:43","slug":"uk-conservatives-are-banking-on-a-losing-strategy","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/radiofree.asia\/2021\/09\/19\/uk-conservatives-are-banking-on-a-losing-strategy\/","title":{"rendered":"UK Conservatives Are Banking on a Losing Strategy"},"content":{"rendered":"\n \n\n\n\n

The approach that delivered electoral success for the UK\u2019s Tories over the last decade is starting to run out of road. But for now, the Conservatives are lucky to have an ineffectual Labour opposition that\u2019s afraid to criticize their pandemic response.<\/h3>\n\n\n
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\n UK prime minister Boris Johnson in August 2020. (Andrew Parsons \/ No 10 Downing Street via Flickr)\n <\/figcaption> \n<\/figure>\n\n\n\n\n

Adapted from Falling Down: The Conservative Party and the Decline of Tory Britain<\/a><\/em> by Phil Burton-Cartledge (Verso Books, September 2021)<\/p>\n\n

When Britain departed the European Union (EU) at the end of January 2020, it did so with the Tories at the peak of their powers. Not only had they won convincingly in 2019, but this was also the culmination of rising support for their party since 2001.<\/p>\n

To talk about the problems the Tories have, and to argue that the party is facing long-term decline, might seem premature, if not downright delusional. But there are powerful social forces working against the Conservatives.<\/p>\n\n \n\n \n \n \n

Sawing Off the Branch<\/h2>\n \n

The Margaret Thatcher and John Major governments were corrosive of their own political dominance. Thatcher\u2019s successful assault on the labor movement left the door open to rolling back the social wage. The preeminence of the executive, with its crude but ruthless attacks on independent points of authority within the state system, and the accelerated closure of swaths of the country\u2019s industrial base, alienated natural supporters in the professions and among the petty bourgeoisie who made a living from the working-class communities the Tories destroyed.<\/p>\n

Compensating for the liquidation and estrangement of these constituencies was the government\u2019s hope that new loyal Tory voters could be generated. These efforts revolved around selling off council homes and opening the housing market, while allowing a limited popular capitalism in the public share\u2013issue of newly privatized utilities. This was enough to keep the Tories in power until 1997.<\/p>\n

After thirteen years of recovery, the Tories returned to office in 2010 and David Cameron set about fashioning a program explicitly aimed at keeping this (now aging) cohort of property owners wedded to the party. The following five years were a period in which a layer of this support was radicalized by the nostalgic certainties proffered by Nigel Farage and the United Kingdom Independence Party (UKIP). The Tories chose to pander to them by doubling down on social security attacks and scapegoating, while conceding a referendum on European Union membership.<\/p>\n