Are the Conservatives conservative?
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Author Topic: Are the Conservatives conservative?  (Read 4953 times)
NewFederalist
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« Reply #25 on: October 26, 2006, 04:44:35 PM »

I say bring back the real Liberals!
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AuH2O
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« Reply #26 on: October 26, 2006, 04:47:15 PM »

I am not saying, and never did say, that Labour and Tories have ALWAYS been the same. I said, RIGHT NOW, the Tories are not a conservative party.

I also did not say they supported the exact same policies as Labour. In fact I said that quite explicity. Rather, I said that the differences between the two sides do not constitute a coherent philosophical gulf.

Now Thatcher, she was a conservative. Watching her call out Labour MPs for supporting communism in South Africa... priceless. But now? The parties just take positions to score political points.
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afleitch
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« Reply #27 on: October 26, 2006, 04:56:40 PM »

Now Thatcher, she was a conservative. Watching her call out Labour MPs for supporting communism in South Africa... priceless. But now? The parties just take positions to score political points.

And what Thatcher did wasn't points scoring? Smiley

The position taken, or indeed lack of position taken by many Conservatives in regards to apartheid in South Africa was indefensible and I'm glad the party has apologised for that.
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AuH2O
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« Reply #28 on: October 26, 2006, 07:57:50 PM »

No, see that's my whole point. Thatcher did not support South Africa because it was politically popular. Instead she did so because it was the right thing to do, for everyone in that country.

A lot of people have died thanks to the cowardice of Western leaders with regard to the issue. Whites, blacks, and asians alike. Handing a country over to the local communist party and calling it "democracy" is something to be ashamed of, not proud of.
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Fmr President & Senator Polnut
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« Reply #29 on: October 26, 2006, 09:24:05 PM »

No, see that's my whole point. Thatcher did not support South Africa because it was politically popular. Instead she did so because it was the right thing to do, for everyone in that country.

A lot of people have died thanks to the cowardice of Western leaders with regard to the issue. Whites, blacks, and asians alike. Handing a country over to the local communist party and calling it "democracy" is something to be ashamed of, not proud of.

How many of the colonial possessions were just handed over to Communists?
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AuH2O
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« Reply #30 on: October 27, 2006, 02:02:18 AM »

I was referring to South Africa. Obviously the fates of former British colonies varied. Rhodesia was forced to surrender but not so much to communists as to simple barbarians.

Obviously the ANC, while a terrorist organization prior to assuming command, is not really that ideological (though this is also the case with most communist parties, because communism is just a cheap slogan that serves more readily than inventing a new one). The ANC operates primarily on corruption. But a side effect, as in the USSR as it sharply declined in the wake of decreased oil prices in the 1980s, is incompetence on top of massive corruption.

British guilt vis-a-vis South Africa probably will wind up costing, at an extreme minimum, several million lives within a matter of decades. Probably more like many millions. Since the political "benefit" is corrupt one-party rule, the net outcome was countless AIDS cases and increased poverty and extreme crime. That's really something to be proud of.
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Rural Radical
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« Reply #31 on: October 27, 2006, 07:22:04 AM »

It seems evident to me that history is repeating itself in British politics.  In the 1980's, Labour were consistently defeated for being far too left-wing, right up until they got themselves a shiny new leader who pretty much abandoned many of the key principles of the party (i.e. socialism) and aimed for the middle ground instead.

No, it didn't happen like that at all. What actually happend was far more complicated and part of a longrunning internal civil war (which began right after the 1970 defeat). But that's certainly what the New Right and Hard Left in the Party like to pretend happend...

Warning: the following is not neutral and does not pretend to be... people from other wings of the party would doubtless disagree over much of it. Regardless...

Basically: following the 1979 defeat, the leftwing grassroots of the party grew in power and were able to pass a load of very leftwing motions at the 1980 Conference. Callaghan resigned as leader because of this (note that at this point Labour were probably heading for victory in the next General Election... that irony is still quite painful...), leftwing academic Michael Foot (a very clever man, but a dire leader and with no ability to connect with the public whatsoever) was elected leader over rightwing former Chancellor Denis Healey, the civl war broke out in earnest, was extremely messy (I can go into details if you want...), the liberal Right broke off and formed the SDP, the Falklands happend, Labour got crushed in the '83 elections and Foot resigned. He was replaced by Kinnock (on the left, but more old left than new left) who spent his time as leader (which lasted for almost a decade) trying to shift the party back to where it had been before 1980 (both in terms of policy and electoral appeal), and trying to kill of the Trotskyite sh*ts who had been infiltrating the party (with disturbing success in some areas) since the late '70's. You also had the beginnings of the rebranding of the party during this period; the red rose got adopted as the new logo and so on.
After Kinnock resigned as leader, the new leader (John Smith) did a lot to moderate party policy and to change party rules and organisation. Had he not died suddenly, Labour would still have won a landslide in 1997.
There never was any need for The Almighty And Wonderful Dear Leader And Clinton Clone, and Blair didn't actually change the party much, at least not in a postive way.
What happend after Blair took over was a load of entirely cosmetic changes, including the entirely symbolic battle over the rewriting of Clause IV of the Party Constitution (which committed Labour to public ownership. In theory. Up until Gaitskell tried to get rid of it in the early '60's, it had never been of any real importance (the nationalizations of the '40's were not done for ideological reasons), and even after then it only had a link to proposed Labour policy in one General Election; 1983), which, contrary to the claims of the Hard Left, did not mark a formal ditching of Socialism (the first line of the new Clause IV reads: "The Labour Party is a democratic socialist party") it just meant that the commitment to Socialism become much more vague (bringing us into line with most other European Socialist parties). As it happens, I prefer the old Clause IV, not that it matters much.
Anyways, Blair used to have a great deal of appeal for certain sorts of middle class voters (not anymore o/c) and as it happens, these are exactly the sort of voters that Cameron appeals to (apparently these people will vote for anything that looks shiny and new) and having him as leader helped boost Labour's majorities in '97 and '01, but we would still have won without him.
The negative changes brought by Blair have been greater control by the leadership over the party (nowhere near Tory levels yet o/c; he would never have got away with doing what Howard did to Flight) and a nasty tendency to try to piss off the party that he leads, the result of which has been a sharply declining membership (although even now the state of the party grassroots is better than the Tories and LibDems; not that that says much... 20% of Conservative Associations and 40% of local LibDem parties have less than 100 members per constituency). Membership would have declined anyway (it always does when we're in Government) but not that sharply.
At the moment the Party seems to be swinging back towards the left; the main Hard Left slate won the NEC elections and Jon Cruddas's deputy leadership campaign has got us on the Soft Left quite excited.

Well done. I agree with most of that especially Michael Foot.
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Bleeding heart conservative, HTMLdon
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« Reply #32 on: October 28, 2006, 08:24:53 PM »

The Conservative Party under Cameron is magnificient.
And I'm not just saying that cause I dig the new logo Smiley
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Joe Republic
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« Reply #33 on: October 29, 2006, 07:04:35 AM »

It seems evident to me that history is repeating itself in British politics.  In the 1980's, Labour were consistently defeated for being far too left-wing, right up until they got themselves a shiny new leader who pretty much abandoned many of the key principles of the party (i.e. socialism) and aimed for the middle ground instead.

No, it didn't happen like that at all. What actually happend was far more complicated and part of a longrunning internal civil war (which began right after the 1970 defeat). But that's certainly what the New Right and Hard Left in the Party like to pretend happend...

Warning: the following is not neutral and does not pretend to be... people from other wings of the party would doubtless disagree over much of it. Regardless...

Basically: following the 1979 defeat, the leftwing grassroots of the party grew in power and were able to pass a load of very leftwing motions at the 1980 Conference. Callaghan resigned as leader because of this (note that at this point Labour were probably heading for victory in the next General Election... that irony is still quite painful...), leftwing academic Michael Foot (a very clever man, but a dire leader and with no ability to connect with the public whatsoever) was elected leader over rightwing former Chancellor Denis Healey, the civl war broke out in earnest, was extremely messy (I can go into details if you want...), the liberal Right broke off and formed the SDP, the Falklands happend, Labour got crushed in the '83 elections and Foot resigned. He was replaced by Kinnock (on the left, but more old left than new left) who spent his time as leader (which lasted for almost a decade) trying to shift the party back to where it had been before 1980 (both in terms of policy and electoral appeal), and trying to kill of the Trotskyite sh*ts who had been infiltrating the party (with disturbing success in some areas) since the late '70's. You also had the beginnings of the rebranding of the party during this period; the red rose got adopted as the new logo and so on.
After Kinnock resigned as leader, the new leader (John Smith) did a lot to moderate party policy and to change party rules and organisation. Had he not died suddenly, Labour would still have won a landslide in 1997.
There never was any need for The Almighty And Wonderful Dear Leader And Clinton Clone, and Blair didn't actually change the party much, at least not in a postive way.
What happend after Blair took over was a load of entirely cosmetic changes, including the entirely symbolic battle over the rewriting of Clause IV of the Party Constitution (which committed Labour to public ownership. In theory. Up until Gaitskell tried to get rid of it in the early '60's, it had never been of any real importance (the nationalizations of the '40's were not done for ideological reasons), and even after then it only had a link to proposed Labour policy in one General Election; 1983), which, contrary to the claims of the Hard Left, did not mark a formal ditching of Socialism (the first line of the new Clause IV reads: "The Labour Party is a democratic socialist party") it just meant that the commitment to Socialism become much more vague (bringing us into line with most other European Socialist parties). As it happens, I prefer the old Clause IV, not that it matters much.
Anyways, Blair used to have a great deal of appeal for certain sorts of middle class voters (not anymore o/c) and as it happens, these are exactly the sort of voters that Cameron appeals to (apparently these people will vote for anything that looks shiny and new) and having him as leader helped boost Labour's majorities in '97 and '01, but we would still have won without him.
The negative changes brought by Blair have been greater control by the leadership over the party (nowhere near Tory levels yet o/c; he would never have got away with doing what Howard did to Flight) and a nasty tendency to try to piss off the party that he leads, the result of which has been a sharply declining membership (although even now the state of the party grassroots is better than the Tories and LibDems; not that that says much... 20% of Conservative Associations and 40% of local LibDem parties have less than 100 members per constituency). Membership would have declined anyway (it always does when we're in Government) but not that sharply.
At the moment the Party seems to be swinging back towards the left; the main Hard Left slate won the NEC elections and Jon Cruddas's deputy leadership campaign has got us on the Soft Left quite excited.

Al, I'm not as ignorant of British politics as you think I am.  I happened to know a lot of all that already.  Besides, what you just typed was a massively complicated way of saying what I already had done.
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Filuwaúrdjan
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« Reply #34 on: October 29, 2006, 07:41:59 AM »

Al, I'm not as ignorant of British politics as you think I am.

Actually, I don't think you're ignorant of British politics. If I thought that you were ignorant, I'd have given the sort of short answers I give to Goldie, instead of typing out that long thing over there.

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Most accounts of what happend in the '80's are much longer and much more complicated than that Tongue
I even managed to avoid mentioning the disputed results of the Deputy Leadership contest of '81!

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In parts yes, in parts no.

This would be the key difference:

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Essentially my argument is that the nessessary changes to the party had happend before the shiny new leader came along, and that the party would have won the next election anyway. What the shiny new leader was good at, was winning over the votes of certain groups of people who would otherwise have never thought about voting Labour. These people, mostly, stopped voting Labour in 2005...

...but I don't doubt that Cameron is trying to do what Blair was seen to have done in the early '90's (the whole shiny, new, modern etc, leader thing).
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afleitch
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« Reply #35 on: October 29, 2006, 07:59:16 AM »

Cameron's repositioning is purely cosmetic; his partys policies (many of which in the recnt past were popular according to poll data, but support fell when voters were told they were Tory policies) cannot be taken seriously if his party has a poor public image.

If you read carefully what Cameron is saying, even the things that seem downright odd at first glance you can see they are carefully calculated to make Labour look as if they are taking the 'extreme' position even when in reality they are not. Everything Cameron says and does is designed to make Labour look less centrist by comparison.

For example, Camerons response to the veil issue; supporting the education authorities position but saying politicians should stay out of making pronouncements made the comments made by Labour cabinet minsters seem extreme. Speaking out against Gordon Browns NHS cuts was designed to make the Conservatives appear more favourable (and the party are in a statistical tie when it comes to best at managing the NHS) Even his support for gay couples and civil partnerships (regardless of his actual voting record) was designed to outflank Blairs more generic (but with an actual voting record) support for gay rights during his conference speech.

Cameron is trying to reposition the perception of his party, rather than policy and also trying to influence the voters perception of Labour.
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Filuwaúrdjan
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« Reply #36 on: October 29, 2006, 08:21:16 AM »

(and the party are in a statistical tie when it comes to best at managing the NHS)

That's only because the negative campaign waged by the media has reduced the figures for all parties to below 30% in most polls. It's one thing to be tied when it's around 40/40, quite another when it's around 27/27 or so.
I still find it amusing that most people think that their local hospitals have been improving, while also thinking that the opposite is the case everywhere else...
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« Reply #37 on: October 29, 2006, 09:13:29 AM »


At the moment the Party seems to be swinging back towards the left; the main Hard Left slate won the NEC elections and Jon Cruddas's deputy leadership campaign has got us on the Soft Left quite excited.

You on the soft left too Al? Smiley

Crudda's campaign has got me excited, he's affiliated with Compass it seems. Hopefully the NEC elections were merely protest voting (e.g. my ballot which didn't get posted off anyway, I would've only voted for Wolfgang as a snub against the control freakery of the central party).
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Filuwaúrdjan
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« Reply #38 on: October 31, 2006, 11:37:22 AM »


Yep

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I think that the Hard Left did so well (IIRC their successful candidates came first, second, third and fourth on the ballot) was down to a mix of protest voting and a low turnout (both things are o/c significant in their own way).
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