The days after Christmas were the coldest in England for a
quarter century. In southern England, rare snow flurries chased
each other over gently rolling landscapes that offered little
protection from biting winds. Had this spell of cold weather
arrived just a day or two earlier, the famous London bookies would
have lost 3 million pounds to those who bet on a White
Christmas.
Frosty temperatures have their reflection in the general mood.
When the season's best selling book carries the title "Is It Just
Me Or Is Everything Shit?" things are probably not exactly what
they should be.
Into this gloom, British Tories and their new leader, David
Cameron, who was elected overwhelmingly in early December, have
tried to interject notes of rejuvenation, optimism, and change. For
a party that itself has been beset by deep depression in recent
years, it is a striking attempt at transformation. As a senior Tory
politician said during a recent visit to Washington, "Even if we do
get a good idea, the public won't buy it just because it comes from
us."
Whether the transformation of the Conservative Party to a party of
the "middle" with a leader who identifies himself as a "liberal
conservative" will work remains to be seen. The media loves the
story, and opinion polls have boosted the Conservatives ahead of
the ruling Labour Party for the first time in forever. The big
questions are: Will the base of the Tory Party buy it? Will voters
believe that the transformation is more than cosmetic? And can Mr.
Cameron keep the Tories together until the next election in three
or four year's time?
Mr. Cameron's open and youthful face as well as good television
presence is a big help. Political cartoonists have so far settled
on a cherubic version of Mr. Cameron's appearance, which, if it
lasts, will stand him in good stead in the next general election
when he will face the glum looking Gordon Brown, Chancellor of the
Exchequer and prospective successor to Prime Minister Tony
Blair.
Paradoxically, the new set of policy priorities unveiled by the
Tories at New Year appear to be polar opposites of the election
platform of the very same Conservative Party in last May's
election. The former platform, written by none other than Mr.
Cameron himself, talked about increasing national control of how
British international aid dollars are spent; cutting taxes;
reducing regulatory burdens on business; increasing the police
force by 5,000 a year; and reducing government borrowing.
The modernization program, by contrast, is the brain child is
Conservative Party Chairman Sir Francis Maude. The platform now
goes like this: The Tories will make fighting global poverty a
moral obligation, not an afterthought. They will judge domestic
policies on how much they help the least well off, not the rich.
They will fight for equal pay for women. They will stand up to big
business.
The Tories will work to improve the National Health Service and
abandon any idea of allowing public funds to pay for private care.
The Tories will demand radical reform of the police and not "treat
them with kid gloves." The Tories will be more welcoming to
immigrants.
Mr. Cameron, a public relations specialist by trade, stated after
his election to Tory leadership that no policy would be beyond
review. He has enthusiastically embraced the new Conservative
program, indicating a perhaps startling level of mental
flexibility.
One of his most eye catching maneuvers has been to sign up Boomtown
Rats rocker turned international poverty guru Bob Geldoff as a Tory
adviser on foreign aid, a notion which one Daily Telegraph
columnist calls "hard to absorb." Mr. Geldoff, for his part,
insists that he does not engage in party politics and will be
taking the Tories publicly to task if they fail to deliver for the
world's poor.
Triangulation of issues is obviously the name of the Tories'
strategic game, and it is a game Labour has played superbly well
under Mr. Blair. The Tories are massing to move into Labour
territory before the next election, which is indeed necessary if
they are ever to stand a chance of winning.
But key is whether they can do so by applying consistent
conservative principles, and avoid becoming "Labour light." If,
however, they forget what they stand for and abandon their base in
order to chase votes, count on a return of the Tory winter of
discontent.
First appeared in The Washington Times