The Spectator

Clunk!

Rarely has there been such a triumph of expectation management as the arrival in No. 10 of the new Prime Minister

Already a subscriber? Log in

This article is for subscribers only

Subscribe today to get 3 months' delivery of the magazine, as well as online and app access, for only £3.

  • Weekly delivery of the magazine
  • Unlimited access to our website and app
  • Enjoy Spectator newsletters and podcasts
  • Explore our online archive, going back to 1828

So the way, at last, is clear for Mr Brown. As Fraser Nelson argues on page 14, the new PM is already making a brazen bid for Middle Britain, and for the C1s he knows are so crucial to any general election. In his acceptance speech as the new Labour leader in Manchester on Sunday, he used the word ‘aspiration’ nine times. He promised to make affordable housing a priority and to appoint a Housing Minister who would sit in Cabinet as of right. He posed before a huge Union flag, declaring himself a defender of the ‘British way of life’ and the tribune of those ‘anxious’ about its passing. If Mr Blair was the British Clinton, then (in his cultural positioning, at least) Mr Brown may yet be the Scottish Sarkozy.

No less brazenly, he postures as the ‘change’ candidate, presenting himself as the new, and Mr Cameron as the inheritor of all that was least attractive about the Blair era. It is in this spirit that the new Prime Minister has offered jobs to senior Lib Dems, re-branding himself as the arch-tribalist turned all-embracing pluralist. Such claims should be treated with healthy scepticism: after ten years of factional behaviour, it will take more than a few stunts to persuade us that Mr Brown has genuinely changed. But one cannot fault his cunning or sense of drama.

At a personal level, the defection of Quentin Davies to Labour on Tuesday was a Conservative gain: Mr Davies has long been a troublesome and tiresome Tory, and his new Labour handlers will find him irksomely high maintenance. That said, the symbolism and timing of his floor-crossing is indisputably damaging to Mr Cameron. It is almost 12 years since Alan Howarth defected to New Labour from the Tories; by now, the traffic ought to be heading in the Conservatives’ direction. Instead, it continues towards Labour, and for new reasons. Up to and including Robert Jackson, who defected in 2005, the main grievance cited by Tories jumping ship has been the Conservatives’ alleged ‘extremism’. Mr Davies’s bizarre Europhilia certainly played a part in his decision — odd, given Mr Brown’s contempt for Brussels — but the essence of his charge was that ‘the Conservative party appears to me to have ceased collectively to believe in anything, or to stand for anything’.

Again, this should not be taken at face value. ‘I think that when some people talk about substance,’ Mr Cameron said at the last Tory conference, ‘what they mean is they want the old policies back.’ This is a fair point. But that does not alter the fact that Mr Davies’s critique reflects a much broader concern that, in cleverly decontaminating the Tory brand, Mr Cameron has stripped it of purpose and mission.

To defeat Mr Brown, the Conservative leader needs not a shopping list of policies, but a clear range of positions that shows he is not only personally appealing, but on the electorate’s side, and in touch with their day-to-day anxieties and aspirations. For most people in this country, who cannot afford wind turbines and private schools, life remains something of a struggle: they want a society in which it is safe to walk the streets, in which they can make ends meet, in which social mobility is a reality rather than a slogan, and government, when it taxes them, provides value for money.

To defeat Mr Brown, the Tory leader will have to show that he understands such voters as well as the more affluent Lib Dem-inclined ABs in marginal seats whom he has targeted relentlessly with his emphasis upon the environment and international aid. The two are not mutually exclusive. There is no need for Mr Cameron to return to a ‘core vote’ strategy, as some will urge him to. Equally, being a One Nation politician, as he claims to be, means more than reassuring the affluent bien pensants.

Mr Brown faces formidable challenges: the brute fact of Labour’s electoral disaster in May is not altered by the hoopla of the past few days. Iraq, the rise of English nationalism, the demands for an EU referendum, the Broken Society analysed by Andrew Neil on page 18, the scandalous levels of council tax, the continued threat of Islamism: all these will weigh down upon him. But the fact is that the Tories badly underestimated the new Prime Minister and the force of his clunking fist. To stand a chance of forming the next government, they must snap out of it and raise their game — fast.

Comments

Join the debate for just $5 for 3 months

Be part of the conversation with other Spectator readers by getting your first three months for $5.

Already a subscriber? Log in