Normally at the
end of Conference season, I do a post outlining the thoughts and key themes of
each conference. However there appears
to be one overarching theme linking the conferences of all of the main parties. It is that of reacting to the referendum vote
in June and talk of learning lessons, of reaching out and of policy shifts.
When conference speeches go wrong: Amber Rudd delivering her now notorious conference speech |
The biggest
example of reaching out comes from the Prime Minister. Mirroring her post inauguration speech in July, May’s
conference speech was a return to attempting to woo blue collar voters with
promises to help people get on and promises to curb the excesses of casino-capitalism. These policy shifts are problematic for
several reasons, not that this has occurred to the more excitable elements of
Progress who are, frankly, bricking it from May parking her tanks on their
policy lawn.
For starters, May
is essentially flying in the face of many in her party who want a return to the
red meat of right wing rule. Many of
them are pleased at the vote in June, as this – their logic dictates – will lead
to a low regulation, low ‘overheads’ and highly flexible UK out with the EU
which will (apparently) attract inward investment. We saw this with the keynote speeches from
Fox, Johnson and from Davies. We’ve also
seen it from the various media appearances from Duncan Smith – a man who went
to Easterhouse and left wanting to make the residents life more difficult.
Part of that
desire to re-establish a right wing government in the UK comes from the
perception that Labour are out contention for the next UK Westminster Election
(at least) and partly from the perception that UKIP will now be a busted flush –
their aim of ‘an Independent UK’ now on course to be reality. In the case of Labour’s (self inflicted, due
in no small measure to the Blairite Progress Fifth Column) incapacitation as an electoral
force, this has fueled May’s desire to adopt so called ‘centrist’
policies. UKIP’s problems has also fueled
policy grabs - witness Amber Rudd’s embarrassing conference speech (above) and rank bad
foreigners list policy.
Whether May
actually will enact those ‘centrist’ policies will be a mute point. The thing that marks UK politics is the
ability of our leaders to talk left but to act right. Blair and Brown got away with it as Labour
politicians because of the New Labour assumption that real left wing policies
were not popular. Cameron and May might
receive envious glances from Progress wingers, but ultimately won’t get away
with it. Cameron, because he wasn’t
clever enough to get away from the perception that he was ultimately too clever
by half. May because, I think,
triangulation and swiping of centrist policies won’t be her priorities.
Labour have been
trying to reach out too… across no mans land to each wing of the party. After a bitter and divisive leadership
election campaign won by Corbyn, we now have the bitter and divisive fall out
from said election campaign. There hasn’t
really been very much new in terms of policy coming from Corbyn’s Labour party,
partly because any policy announcements would be the start of another big fall
out. For both the Momentum and the
Progress factions within Labour, the time for talking is almost over. Either they find a way to pull together for
the sake of their party… or they both
take their share in the near inevitable slaughter currently scheduled for May
2020.
If we are
watching the break-up of the Labour party, it’s main beneficiaries here in
Scotland seem ideally placed to slip into their shoes. Especially in the key
test of sounding more radical than you are stakes. It seems to be forgotten among the heat
generated by the First Ministers announcement that preparations for the Bill to
pass to enable a second Independence referendum are to begin this week that the
SNP backed proposals for a third runway at Heathrow. That Heathrow’s owners paid for a stall at
last weeks conference is, of course, entirely coincidental and was in no way an
influence on the SNP government.
However, allied to the conservative manifesto for May’s Holyrood
election, the SNP do find themselves in a quandary with a noisy left wing
contingent at Westminster and a centrist at best, sitting Holyrood government. Then again, Independence and the attainment of
it is turning into a rather handy fig leaf for, if not the SNP hierarchy then
certainly the online supporters and the pro-Indy… er… blogs (surely “News
Websites”? – Ed).
Indeed, to
Sturgeon’s credit, she or the Scottish Government haven’t gone down the route
that the more excitable pro-Indy supporters have gone down of not criticising
the party for fear of handing ammunition to the hated “Yoons”. While her opening conference speech on
Thursday morning concerned itself with the EU referendum fallout and that
Indyref 2 announcement, Saturday’s Keynote speech concerned itself with
domestic issues. That and a call for
inclusion.
It’s not been the
first time Sturgeon has made a call to be inclusive and to be respectful of ‘No’
voters in the Independence referendum, though it’s the first time this call has
been made through the prism of the EU referendum. It is a call that has gone unheeded on the
MacTwittersphere as people still insist on using the phrase “Yoons”, the
hashtag #youyesyet and other such things insinuating that ‘we’ told you
so. Personally, I find that all tiresome
and disrespectful of the pro-Union voter.
After all, it’s not as if the case for Independence was bombproof. Much more annoying is the disrespect shown to
those people (including myself) that voted to leave the EU.
A million Scots
voted Leave in June, I’d imagine that a hefty proportion of them voted because
of the EU’s “Ever closer union” doctrine which sees consistent land grabs of
power from sovereign states around the EU or because of the EU’s failure to
deal with the aftermath of the Credit Crunch and subsequent banking
crisis. For those people (as it does for
me) immigration figures (if it does) way down the list of reasons to leave the
EU. Instead, those voters are treated with
distain and like closet Tories. If the
SNP Government genuinely wanted to be inclusive, they’d take our criticisms of the
EU on board and not dismiss them as “we know the EU is not perfect, but…”.
But then again,
the SNP have their own agenda with the EU, wishing to do things that will
placate the EU, which they hope will smooth the path for an Independent
Scotland to join the EU. It is the only
explanation I have for their naïve attitude towards the EU and their
unquestioning adoption of European directives like with the outsourcing of
Ferry routes or the contract for Scotrail being given to companies (or the
national rail network of the Netherlands in the case of Abbelo).
It is a sure sign
that the political landscape is still in flux that all of the big parties held conservative
conferences that played to their own supporter’s core values but talked big on
issues out with their comfort zones. While Labour are still trying to find
their way out of their self inflicted wilderness, both the Tories and the SNP
made claims and policy statements designed to keep their electoral
attractiveness in difficult times. The
problem with that is that talk is cheep and governments are judged on actions,
not warm fuzzy words. Just ask the man whose
stock since leaving office is still plummeting, David Cameron.
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