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Friday, 10 October 2025

Save the Tories

The Guardian has decided that it must save the Conservative Party from decline, as if it were an endagered species. In order to do this, it must first ignore the party's recent history, and then construct a mythos about the nature of conservative politics that reaches back more than a century to Weimar Germany, of all places. To get the ball rolling, Polly Toynbee first argues that we need a healthy Conservative Party. But what she is effectively asking for is the preservation of Thatcherism, which remains the essence of contemporary Toryism: privatisation, deregulation and a disdain for welfare. She herself admits that the Conservative Party "has presided, especially since the 1980s, over capital supremacy at the expense of labour, sky-high inequality, public service degradation and me-first individualism." There is no route from the present moment that offers a return to the One Nation conservatism of Michael Heseltine, let alone Harold Macmillan. Invoking either is futile nostalgia. Invoking both, as she does, looks like delusion. What Toynbee really wants is the restoration of the post-Thatcher cartel - i.e. an ideological spectrum running from Blair to Cameron - hence she talks up the likes of David Gauke. 


Her current fears arise less from her desire for a "better brand of conservatism" than from her recognition of Starmer's failure to establish a popular "grownup" politics over the last 15 months. What she cannot acknowledge is that Kemi Badenoch is a symptom of the cartel's steady rightward shift since the 1990s, rather than some aberration peculiar to the Tories, and that this is linked to Starmer's failure to hegemonise her preferred centrism. Ironically, the one thing that would have buttressed the Tories would have been a Labour victory under Jeremy Corbyn in 2019, as that would have encouraged them to shift towards the centre-right space and present themselves as a safe alternative for both traditional conservative and liberal voters frightened by the Red Terror, even as they insisted that the people's will must be observed over Brexit. They cannot do that now because Labour under Starmer has occupied that space, and adopted the same stance on Brexit, thereby pushing Tory voters further right, hence the escalation in the rhetoric over migrants and the European Convention on Human Rights.

In another wisftul paean to the "moderate right", Zoe Williams, citing Daniel Ziblatt's research on the National People's Party of Weimar Germany, claims that "When the mainstream right loses its confidence, when it starts to chase the buzzwords and symbolic politics of the far right, it hands them the steering wheel." This is a misreading of the DNVP's history and the dynamics of the Weimar Republic. The Deutschnationale Volkspartei was formed by the merger of multiple nationalistic, monarchistic and reactionary parties in 1918 and was virulently antisemitic from the start. Socially, it was the party of landowners, industrialists and the Lutheran middle-classes. It was strongest in rural areas, particularly in Prussia and Pomerania. Politically, it took an ambivalent stance towards the Kapp putsch of 1920 and regularly called for the assassination of government ministers as "traitors". In other words, the DNVP was both consistently hostile to the Weimar Republic and had already adopted the central plank of what would become the Nazi programme before the NSDAP's foundation. It wasn't chasing the Nazis. If anything, it provided a readymade social and political environment in which the Nazis could thrive.

The NSDAP came to national prominence largely due to the platform offered it by the DNVP's push for a referendum on the Young (reparations) Plan in 1929. If there is a parallel between the DNVP and the UK Conservative Party it was in the way the former's push for a referendum divided the nation and consolidated the right around a more radical locus. But the parallel breaks down when you realise that even after the merger of 1918 the political right in Germany was still fragmented. As well as being antisemitic, the DNVP was anti-Catholic, with the result that conservative Catholics gravitated to the Centre Party in the Rhineland and the BVP in Bavaria. These two parties were also more supportive of the Weimar Republic, participating in numerous coalition governments. In summary, the "mainstream right" did not lose its confidence until 1933, and even then Franz von Papen (on the right of the Centre Party) imagined he was manipulating Hitler, not the other way round. The DNVP were Nazis avant la lettre in their extreme antisemitism, hostility to the Republic, and violent hatred of the SPD and KPD. The DNVP's voters switched decisively to the NSDAP in 1930.

Williams' German history is bad, but her British history isn't much better. "What happened to the old-school Conservatives, who treasure stability, conservation, the constitution, the pride of Britain on the world stage? What happened to the modernisers, who described the nation in terms of powerhouses, not powder kegs? Don’t get me wrong, I wasn’t wild about any of them either, but it’s absolutely striking how those worldviews – the one nation Tory, the Cameroonian Conservative – have been erased, in favour of relentless demonisation: of migrants, Muslims, benefit claimants and protesters." Like Toynbee, Williams seeks to invent a Tory who never existed. But whereas the former at least tries to locate this species in the distant past, the latter attempts to set up an opposition between the Cameronian party of 2015-19 and the Conservative Party of today, which requires a lot of forgetfulness. Would an old-school Conservative who treasured stability have risked the EU referendum? Was George Osborne a moderniser, his austerity wilfully misunderstood? Did Theresa May ever tell migrants to "go home"? Did Boris Johnson ever say anything disobliging about Muslims?


You might be wondering why the Guardian thinks the Conservatives should be saved, given that the Liberal Democrats are perfectly capable of offering a centre-right alternative that the paper would find congenial. Why not celebrate the eclipse of the Tories and go all-in on Ed Davey? The answer, I suspect, is that they recognise the risk that the Liberal Democrats could outflank Labour on the left, particularly over civil rights and a more humane attitude towards immigration. This would make it too obvious that Labour has become the actual conservative party of British politics: unwilling to gainsay the financial markets, instinctively authoritarian, and mawkishly patriotic. They need the Tories in play as well if they are to present themselves as the party of the nation. The analogy of society with a family hasn't really enjoyed a vogue since the days of George Orwell ("the wrong members in control"), possibly because Thatcher made the terms mutually exclusive, but it is useful here. If the left and the Greens are dismissed as foolish youth, and Labour and (to a lesser extent) the Lib Dems are the grownups, then Reform is your racist, raffish uncle and the Tories your racist, wealthy aunt. Starmer's backers in the press still want him to be the centrist dad of the nation, despite his utter unsuitability for the role, and will happily reinvent the Conservative Party if it helps to achieve that goal.

5 comments:

  1. I think you're essentially right here, as far as the merely political aspects go Starmer's Labour is a conservative party, lacking New Labour's messianic attachment to technology, education and novelty in the abstract, and so afraid of the media and electorate to take decisive action in any field.

    The analyses of centrists and Pol Profs are largely redundant because of their inability to perceive that the right-wing is not in the slightest bit conservative now, basically the culmination of years of Thatcherism in ideology and practice. In socio-economic policy they fully embrace the delusion that modern capitalism is and should be marked by competition, freedom of choice and entrepreneurism, which they also combine with an anti-social outlook on personal 'freedom', which they essentially equate to a freedom from restraint when it comes to voicing and exercising prejudices, or behaviour that might directly or indirectly harm others such as smoking, unlimited car use or tax avoidance. These positions are ultimately destructive of social bonds and even undermine the efficient operation of the capitalist economy, marked as it is by complex interdependence.

    Both Blair's and Starmer's Labour at least have some understanding that the neoliberal polity requires some kind of carrot as well as lashing out with the stick, though they stop well short of actually threatening the social and economic privileges of those groups who benefit from taking their cut from the social product.

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  2. There was an article about Reform's annual conference in the London Review of Books three weeks ago.

    https://www.lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v47/n17/peter-geoghegan/short-cuts

    It concludes by quoting a prospective Reform candidate for Westminster Council. ‘I was originally a Thatcherite,’ he said. ‘After Thatcher I didn’t have a political home. Until Nigel came along.’

    There is a lot of false memory about Thatcher's time as PM. The first three years of the monetarism experiment were disastrous for the UK economy. The economy was then stabilised by deeper integration with Europe: Thatcher was one of the architects of the Single Market which centred on the four freedoms (including freedom of movement of labour) and loads of regulations (so that a widget made in Athlone can be sold in Athens and everyone knows what the widget is and isn't). After 10 years as PM, sleeping only four hours per night, the Conservative Party decided that Thatcher was likely to become a liability and that a period of calm was required. Yet some parts of the Conservative Party wanted the revolution to go on. Since then, the Conservative Party has been trying to find a way to follow-on from Thatcher without fully understanding what she achieved and what she didn't.

    Farage is a pastiche of Thatcher, though his main achievement has been to push the UK out of the Single Market, which was one of Thatcher's main achievements. There is obviously a market in politics for people who cosplay Thatcher and say "We have surrendered enough", and Farage is better at it than anyone in the Conservative Party. Whether the UK is in a position to be constantly saying "We have surrendered enough" is another question.

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    1. «quoting a prospective Reform candidate for Westminster Council. ‘I was originally a Thatcherite,’ he said. ‘After Thatcher I didn’t have a political home. Until Nigel came along.’»

      He could have become a supporter of "centrism" (thatcherism+gay marriage etc.) and found a home in New Labour.

      https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2002/jun/10/labour.uk
      “in the urgent need to remove rigidities and incorporate flexibility in capital, product and labour markets, we are all Thatcherites now”

      Also the greatest thatcherite achievement of New Labour was to triple house price and double house rents in 11 years and large property-based redistribution from the lower classes to "Middle England" is the core electoral appeal of thatcherism.

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    2. "Since then, the Conservative Party has been trying to find a way to follow-on from Thatcher without fully understanding what she achieved and what she didn't."

      And complicating the situation even more is the relationship between freeing markets/profiting from global economic links, and the inevitable knock-on effects on personal freedoms. Despite anti-immigration, anti-gay and 'Victorian Values' noises the period of Conservative government between 1979 and 1997 saw significant shifts in social attitudes against discrimination towards women, homosexuals and ethnic minorities, and the party currently competing with Reform for the far-right vote has seen a lot more women and black/Asian politicians rise to positions of prominence than the Labour Party has.

      The underlying issue is probably the tensions created within neoliberal and 'free market' ideology. On the one hand, the market is supposedly blind to colour, creed, gender or even nationality, promoting links across all kinds of barriers and borders. On the other hand, in practice the socio-economic forces and ideology of 'freedom from restraint' that are unleashed effectively erode or destroy social bonds, encouraging the war of all against all and searches for 'enemies within'. All these contradictions are encapsulated within the modern Conservative Party, while Reform is busy denying that there are any links between free trade and human rights.

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    3. «Thatcher was one of the architects of the Single Market»

      Her transparent aim was to use the Single Market to destroy the EEC: the concept was that attracted by low wages, low taxes, low regulation many japanese and USA corporations would setup "maquiladora" plants in the UK (like Nissan did in Sunderland) which would flood the Single Market with cheap products undercutting businesses on the continent that were still "ballasted" by high wages, high taxes and high regulation, bankrupting them, causing widespread unemployment in Italy and France which would then result in at least one of them leaving the EEC, which would then dissolve.

      Blair has exactly the same plan but powered by cheap eastern European immigrants in japanese and chinese "maquiladora" plants in the UK and targeted at bankrupting german businesses instead and Germany would then leave the EU that would then dissolve:

      Ivan Rogers, "Prospect", November 25, 2017:
      “King pressed the case to open the labour market without transition on the grounds that it would help lower wage growth and inflation, address supply bottlenecks in a fast-growing pre-financial crisis economy, and help keep interest rates low [...] But this was an immigration and free movement policy driven by the desire to fuel U.K. growth, and by the belief that we were stealing a march on EU competitors and further consolidating the advantages of the U.K. model over that of a sclerotic Germany, which we were all characterising still in 2004 as the decade-long sick man of Europe.”

      Ironically this backfired and it was the UK that exited the EU instead.

      Boris Johnson also had the same plan, but this time the "maquiladora" plants would be in "Free Trade Zones" powered by cheap indentured immigrants from former colonies in Africa and south Asia, and that is why he negotiated a zero-tariff for goods in the post-exit agreement with the EU

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