The Prime Minister and his band of unhappy Tories

If Cameron is to survive midterm unpopularity, he needs to do much more to raise his party’s morale.

Walking around the House of Commons, you don't have to go very far to find an unhappy Conservative MP. David Cameron may have become Prime Minister, ending 13 years of Labour rule, but Tory MPs feel like passengers rather than crew on the coalition government's journey. The Conservative leadership is struggling to connect with a parliamentary party that feels underpaid, is threatened by a major review of constituency boundaries and isn't getting to see implemented the Conservative manifesto that it waited all those years for.

Given the coalition's radicalism, complaints about the ideological direction may seem odd. But, to understand the unhappy Tory MP, you need to distinguish between three different kinds of policy.

First, there are the policies of necessity – notably spending cuts – which nearly every Conservative MP supports but knows aren't popular. Second, there are the major, liberalising reforms of this government: greater school choice, making work pay, decentralising power. These are supported by the core of the Conservative Party, often very enthusiastically. But it's the third set of policies that best explains MPs' restlessness.

Agenda bending

I call them "mainstream Conservative" policies. They include a tough approach to crime, investment in defence, repatriation of powers from Europe and support for the family. They are the policies that motivate the Tory grass roots to raise money for their party and to stuff leaflets through letter boxes on wet Saturdays. They are the policies that most distinguish the average Conservative from the average Lib Dem or Labour activist. And you may have noticed they are barely part of this government's agenda. They are the policies that Nick Clegg has vetoed. As midterm unpopularity reaches record depths, as I predict it will, Cameron won't be able to reach for the mainstream policy toolkit for measures to sweeten the mood of his party.

The Conservative Parliamentary Party understands the compromises of coalition government but it worries that Cameron doesn't seem to share its frustration at them. He seems almost too content in the company of Liberal Democrats. Is the amity tactical or a testament to something deeper?

Conservative MPs want to see a plan for a majority Conservative government at the next election. Where, they wonder, is the proper inquest into the Tories' disappointing general election performance? Why, before Christmas, did Conservative cabinet ministers hold secret discussions on how they might help the Liberal Democrat candidate to win the Oldham East and Saddleworth by-election? Why are senior Tories, close to the leadership, permitted to brief newspapers about the desirability of an ongoing Con-Lib pact?

My own fear is that Team Cameron has drawn the wrong lessons from May 2010. Rather than blaming the agreement to hold the pre-election leaders' debates, or the wobbly Tory message for the English "striving classes", the small circle around the Conservative leader believes that it may be impossible for the Conservative Party to achieve victory at any election. They are particularly depressed by Scotland where, in four successive general elections, the Tories have won either just one or no seats at all.

No big decisions about tactics at the next election should be taken until we know the outcome of the referendum on the Alternative Vote (AV), which is to be held in May. Clegg wants to abolish first-past-the-post because he wants the Liberal Democrats to become the permanent power-brokers in British politics. It is why he went into the coalition negotiations ready to drop his party's tuition fees pledge – and much else besides – but with electoral reform as non-negotiable. Post-election trades between politicians would become the norm, not the exception, if AV passes. Politicians will have institutionalised the freedom to wriggle out of manifesto promises.

If AV is to be defeated, an anti-Clegg message probably needs to be central for the Conservatives. A model is the near-defeat of the Maastricht Treaty in France in 1992. Maastricht was rejected by many French people not because they had turned against the European project, but because President Mitterrand was hated. Opponents of AV need to turn the campaign into a referendum on the broken promises and horse-trading of coalition politics. An all-out attack on Clegg's screeching U-turn on tuition fees may be the best chance of keeping first-past-the-post but will Cameron sanction a campaign that is so hostile to his deputy?

Cameron agreed to the referendum in controversial circumstances. There is a suspicion that he conceded more than he needed to in the fog of the coalition negotiations. Now, in the eyes of his own party, he has an opportunity to put things right. Entering the electoral reform debate in unequivocal terms is his best early opportunity to demonstrate that he wants to implement mainstream, rather than just liberal, Conservative policies. He needs to campaign aggressively for keeping first-past-the-post and its ability to oust unpopular governments. He should also help to ensure that the "No" campaign is well-funded.

Grass-roots manoeuvre

Until now, Cameron has given the impression that his cure for internal party unhappiness is to invite Tory MPs for a glass of wine and a handful of Twiglets at a Downing Street reception. If he is to survive midterm unpopularity, he needs to do much more to raise his party's morale.

A chairman in tune with the party's grass roots would help – unlike the incumbent, Sayeeda Warsi. He also needs an additional parliamentary private secretary, someone who can connect him to the intake of 2010. They account for half of the parliamentary party and are already rebelling against his government in unprecedented numbers. Setting out a vision of a low-tax, pro-family Britain would be useful. Mainstream Conservatism may be impossible to achieve in this government but Cameron should show that it is still his ambition.

Ultimately, the fortunes of this government depend on the economy. If the UK is growing strongly by the time of the next election, it would be a brave pundit who would bet against a second term for Cameron. The task for the Prime Minister is to keep his party together in the difficult years between then and now.

Tim Montgomerie is editor of ConservativeHome.

33 comments

MattNW5's picture

@ Matthew Fox. Perhaps the editors think that exposure to a variety of views enhances one's perspective and the quality of analysis and debate. You don't sound much like you are interest in any views that disagree with your own though. You should try it sometime. You might learn something.

david's picture

I would remind Matthew Fox that giving someone the opportunity to express their views is, 'not' the oxygen of publicity. Tim Montgomerie runs a first class website, which tolerates and encourages people to comment regardless of their beliefs.

Compare TM's site to that of Mike Smithson's political betting, where anyone who desn't subscribe to his, 'Coalitionitis' is attacked and banned.

Forlornehope's picture

The big problem for the Tory party is that Conservative voters just love Cameron but the party members don't.

Harry Cole's picture

think you might be on to something there forlornehope.

MattNW5's picture

I agree - but the same was probably equally true of Blair and the Labour party, and he survived OK

Indu Pendent's picture

Well done to NS team for broading the debate and improving the quality of the publication.

A functional characteristic is that the Tory vote is a lot less loyal than Labour's and Tories have a much smaller hard core of blind-to-everything lifer voters (although both parties have these) . It means the Tories have to perform relatively better to win votes. When the parties are close in terms of performance then Labour will always win a popularity election e.g. their Scotland vote is guarentted even after Labour dismantled the steel and manufacturing in the last 10 years whilst boosted the Scottish public sector dependancy.

If AV changes this and balances our policitcal system then bring it on. It will be good for Labour in the long term but short term vested interests will fight it.

Extranea's picture

My heart bleeds for the poor dear.

As a lot of the misery being heaped on the country at present is about the conservatives winning the next election, if a wing of the party is still unhappy that just shows an amazing amount of greed, even for them.
http://bit.ly/gzsZRF

Johnny's picture

Cameron's 'morale booster' seems to be to attack Muslims as the fascist EDL run riot in the streets of Luton. What better way to get the party faithful behind the party, and the country distracted from the cuts than to do some good old fashion Muslim bashing in a speech? Muslims and others will get bashed in the streets as a result of the emboldened EDL - seems like Cameron can do one calculation right - allowing division and hatred to spread on the streets will take the spotlight off his austerity measures. Disgusting.

Reginald-Fah-fah's picture

Bloody Marvellous! Support from true blues and no common tongue from them Labour Oiks!

Reginald-Fah-fah's picture

Montgomerie my good man, out of the three kind of Tories, which type do you think i am?

I'm a very happy 'Top Tory' and think the Prime Minister David Cameron is a first rate top chap! He doing a marvellous job!!!

David Cameron will be Greatest Prime Minister in British Polticial History! Trust me!

Latest tweets