By Alex Ross / @Alex_Ross1983
I read a recent article in the Guardian that provides yet another example of the unreconstructed nature of "David Cameron’s Conservatives". It was about the so-called "Conservative Madrasa" – the Young Britons Foundation; an offshoot from the official Conservative Future group, who offer training for young members and candidates, and whose leader, Donal Blaney, comes out with such policy gems as scrapping the NHS and announcing that waterboarding is acceptable.
They’re essentially yet another group of unreconstructed Thatcherite Conservatives, perhaps more evidence of the potential fate that awaits the Tories, similar to that of the Republican Party in the USA where the lunatic fringe has taken such a hold.
What’s astonishing is not the fact that there is a young Conservative group with such extreme views – the cynic in me would point out that Cameron’s ‘modernisation’ project for the Tories only ever went as far as detoxifying the brand, not the party – it’s that the party itself would embrace the group so heartily as if no one would find out.
Several key figures in the Conservative Party have endorsed the group by making speeches for them, including Party Chairman, Eric Pickles, and Shadow Defence Secretary, Liam Fox.
It has only been when the Guardian exposed the group that the Tories have now moved to distance themselves from the YBF, a move that is too little, too late when it obviously only comes only once the link has been exposed.
Furthermore, a Conservative Party organiser, James Cutts, has actually resigned over the party claiming they have never sent people to the group for training. Cutts, who acts as spokesman for the east midlands division of Conservative Future, has claimed that the Tory party HQ’s denial of using the group for training is totally fabricated, and that he’s been encouraged to send party members for training many times at a cost of hundreds of pounds a time.
The fact that the Tories are willing to lie to avoid having their links with the group exposed shows how shallow their ‘reconstruction’ really is. A genuine change in the party would have required no lie in the first place, because a truly modern, centre-right Tory party would not have anything to do with such a group, let alone encourage candidates to go there for training.
A similar tale of the unreconstructed nature of the Conservative Party, that clearly runs from the old guard through to the new recruits, showed itself at the Oxford Students Conservative group, where during an election husting last year candidates had to tell ‘the most racist joke they know’, so naturally they happily obliged with someone making a joke about a black man "hanging from the family tree".
When the university found out they disassociated from the group sharpish. However, the same year, numerous high profile Tories such as Michael Howard, Michael Gove and William Hague all spoke at the group, despite its history of outrageous behaviour.
What I don’t really understand is how Cameron and his team thought they’d get away with such links; I can’t believe it’s just a simple lack of experience. Nor do I want to fall back on the stereotypical "it’s their born to rule attitude that makes them think they can waltz along and do as they please" even though both may play a small, subconscious part in my motivation for writing this.
Rather, I think it reveals just how skin-deep Cameron’s modernisation project goes with his own party. He was lambasted for failing to take on his party over the grammar school row years ago, and now after nearly four and a half years as leader of his own party his own young members are revealing themselves to be no different in their views than the old Thatcherite rearguard of his own party who Cameron is desperate to keep quiet in the run up to the election lest the public decide that his party are the ‘same old Tories’ and the whole modernisation project falls apart.
The real question to me is whether or not Cameron actually wants to properly modernise his party. Tony Blair, Gordon Brown and Peter Mandelson truly did want to modernise their party because they believed it didn’t accurately reflect the concerns of the public and therefore would never be fit to govern unless the views of the party changed to reflect that. David Cameron clearly understands the first part of that belief, but doesn’t want to follow through with the necessary second part.
Is that because his own views chime more closely with that of the unreconstructed section of his party than he’d have us believe, or because he simply doesn’t have the power to modernise his party when such large parts of it refuse to be modernised?
Alex Ross is the Campaigns Officer for West Yorkshire Young Labour. If you want to get involved with West Yorkshire Young Labour you can email us westyorkshireyounglabour@gmail.com or visit our website. You can also follow us on Twitter at @WYYoungLabour.
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I always remember the morning after the 2005 election. There was Blair, jubilant, with that rictus grin on his face, sound self satisifed as if the world he had just had a great victory, when in fact he had a disaster - 99 wiped off his majority. He regarded his "great win" as carte blanche to carry on in his same old ways. And Brown, of course, will do the same thing if he DOES get away with it and snatch victory from the jaws of defeat: he will feel entirely vindicated, the Blairites will still hate him and the in-fighting will continue.
If there were more with your integrity I wouldn't have deserted the party. It will be their loss if you do leave.
That said, you would receive a warm welcome from the Green party, and though I don't believe in holier-than-thou grandstanding, I think we have a more honest party than the big 3.
Serious stuff. Which of course means people like me have to justify themselves to the public....very embarresing.
Let's see what the elelction brings....
No Ralph, anyone can see by your writings and actions that you are genuine. Even if they didn't agree with your views, I am sure they would respect your integrity and honesty.
What makes the Cohen affair even more repulsive is that Cohen is SUPPOSED to be a left-winger. You almost expect greed from the Blairites (they had a great tutor) but as you probably know Ralph Waltham Forest is a poor area not unlike Barking and Dagenham, and what with the current story, not forgetting the "sunken bath and jacuzzi" one, when you have constituents living in poverty....words fail you.
Don't want a reward, I get one from my job at the end of every month, it's called an honest paycheck.
Just want to live in a representational democracy ;)
I am sure their are many people who thank you for what you have done, you know the people you speak too and help. I am sure your efforts will be rewarded and hopefully sooner not later. The path you have helped create will allow things to change.
If things don't change it will only be a matter of time for a new Party to emerge, but it will need people like you. It will always be worth fighting for whats right and more people now than ever before are waking up to that fact. We have to put our trust in the people to change things and when we see something we approve off, get behind it 100%.
with regards to Ralph becoming despondent, I think he has come to the same conclusion as many others that our Politics have become so tainted and removed from the truth, that even if Labour are re elected Ralph fears for what a jubilant Brown may bring on all of our houses. Its not even a case of how bad the Tories are, all I can see are liars and thieves whenever they slime their way onto our screens.
Like Ralph I want a Party that will respond the majority and not the majority. Labour had the chance to put wrong the errors of the Tories 18 years, they promised so much and had so much good will, how could they fail, and look at us now?
I feel for Ralph and feel he is a kindred spirit and he speaks so eloquently he even has the ability to put me in my place when needed and in such a gentle manner. I
Jo.
In a way it has been sad over the last year watching you getting more and more despondent about the Labour Party as it is presently construed.
Alex gets in trouble for letting me say this but at least in Scotland we have a credible alternative that has been proving itself more than competent and looking to put its people first.
Tonight on the TV News there was a big piece on the project that Labour and the Tories said would scupper the SNP - Edinburgh's toy tram set. It was due to have opened this year but now it will not open until 2013 at the earliest. It is now 2x over budget and the Local government quango is in dispute with the main contractor so there has been no real progress since before Christmas. The SNP must be hugging themselves as they opposed the scheme but were forced to let the bill through. The people of Edinburgh will have long memories over who it was that foisted this expensive white elephant on their council tax and wrecked many local businesses.
Defeating the BNP and cleaning up a a very small part of the mess will be the last act I do for the Labour Party.
I have fully managed to rebuild communication and usage of the local media, recruited new members, brought in volunteers to help, encouraged people to stand in their local areas, been diplomatic where possible to bring members together, created a platform for a new ideology that embraces people and improves policy making, bated Nick Griffin into a carefully wrought trap, defended and faced the ugly part of my party in the face and offered an alternative and better path, tried to save MP's from destroying their own careers (failed here), played a part in getting rid of one or two dodgy characters who were either corrupt or somewhere to the right of Hitler (within the Labour Party!), been critical but always ready to seek improvement and evolution in the party etc etc.
I reckon I am wasted in one of the mainstream undemocratic right wing neo liberal slave partys.
I need to be "somewhere" where representation is important and where membership is actively sought and the public respected. I am a booster when not blogging and can motivate, encourage and am a good speechwriter/speaker too.
In other words I need to belong to a democratic and a political party. Not a drone-club of sell-outs and talentless arrogant unelites.
Now - just how well will that go down with the English electorate, given they are already squealing like stuck pigs over different prioritisation for drug, elderly care and other provisions that are now very different.
If someone in New Labour had half a brain they could use this to rip the Tories to bits over an issue very dear to the social contract between the electorate and Parliament. Sadly it would also highlight the stupidity of a series of Labour Health Minsters for England .... but what the hey!
No they can't.
If Labour attack this platform the dirty little platforms they are balancing precariously on will be exposed by the Tories.
After the elections I am thinking about leaving the Labour Party (should I not be elected as if I am elelcted I will be obligated to continue to serve) but will be a very big pain in the butt for corrupt Labour members for fun.
I am seriously thinking about being involved setting up a cleaner political party free of criminals and fraudsters. I am just thinking about it, as at the moment the electorate do not have many places to go to as the parties are polarised and the vote pretty much redundent.
so what happens even though Hannan is not an MP he is shaping the debate
When I look at Dan Hannan with his tea parties, and publicity stunt at Fox News over the NHS, it worries me greatly he plans to galvanise the back benches of the Tory party.
I suspect DC has far more sympathy with this type of politics, considering he was seeking advice from a Libertarian economic think tank over NHS policy.
Are the Tories being transparent with the electorate over their real politics?
Judging by the likes of Eric Pickles and Dan Hannan, I suspect not.
Even Ken Clarke has things could get more "extreme" than they were in the 80's? Maybe never truer a word spoken.
I just hope the electorate are 100% fully in the picture, and know what they might be voting for.
Thanks Alex; this needs flagging up.
Jo.
Nurses for Reform? Yes a worrying lot, they advocate that we implement Hannan's idea of a Singapore like system.
There's a less extreme, but still worrying lot called 2020 Health who are advocating that the NHS charges for treating minor injuries and A&E treatment for people who are drunk (amongst other things). I've done some research into them but I've not got the time to complete it. The chair of the group was a candidate in the 2005 election (in Bristol) and failed to be elected. But she's on Cameron's A-list and has done the milkround of selection panels of Tory seats to no avail (I watched a video of her speech to one of the selection panels and she wasn't very good, considering what she was being interviewed for, she appeared to have not bothered at all about preparing her speech).
Something does not smell right. They have several employees but no clear source of income. They have been banqueted several times at our expense at the Palace of Westminster (once by Andrew Lansley). Some of their policies seem to have be integrated into Lansley's policies. Maybe I am imagining things but there seems more to them than is immediately apparent...
Get to the source, who funds the "think-tank"?
Who pays for the thinking and directs the "research"?
First, the association of madrasa with Islamic extremism.
Second, the association of a Conservative association with such extremism.
As a "same old Tories" attack line, it's pathetic.
I believe it was Donal Blaney himself who referred to it as a 'madrasa'.
http://twitter.com/iaindale/status/10067735552