After a historic pasting in the general election, the Conservative Party is back in the saddle, with MPs voting to trim its leadership contest from six candidates to four. But are the Tories drawing the wrong lessons from their election defeat?
The designated frontrunner Kemi Badenoch writes in The Times that the Conservative Party “talked right yet governed left” – a bizarre verdict on 14 years of Tory rule. She claims the UK’s asylum system is “effectively open borders to anyone willing to lie about their circumstances”, which will come as a surprise to the refugees in the Bibby Stockholm.
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She goes on to warn of “nasty identity politics” and “a post-modernism that can best be described as joyless decadence”, as if this culture war drivel means anything outside of her bubble.
Her rival on the right, Robert Jenrick, won’t be outdone in the “anti-woke” department. He writes in The Telegraph, “our culture is under attack from extremists that threaten many of our public institutions”, but he neglects to say who they are. This is McCarthyism without communists.
Jenrick is also Mr Nationalism: Of his 10 “principles” for a “common creed”, six assert the importance of the nation-state, including its power to act freely in the world, especially on immigration, where Jenrick proposes an “annual cap” in the tens of thousands. How he squares this with his support for free markets, or for a strong NHS, are questions he leaves open.
Jenrick has also said he supports Donald Trump in the US election, and recently proposed that people who shout the Islamic phrase “Allahu Akbar” in public should be “immediately arrested”.