In October 2002 Theresa May, the then Chairman of the Conservative
Party, said to her party’s conference: "There's
a lot we need to do in this party of ours. Our base is too narrow and so,
occasionally, are our sympathies. You know what some people call us – the Nasty
Party." That tag owes something to the contrast between the public images
of Margaret Thatcher and Tony Blair: the Iron Lady compared to Blair’s easy
informality. In terms of policies it is not totally clear that the label was
deserved. Poverty increased, but the poor were not denigrated. Unions were
broken, but many felt the unions had become too powerful and selfish in their
use of power. The state was reduced by privatising utilities, but the welfare
state was not seriously diminished. Unemployment rose substantially, but
inflation had to be brought under control. But whether deserved or not, I think
May was right in her observation.
David Cameron also appears to have believed that the
Conservatives had this image problem, and in opposition he aimed to create the idea of a modern
compassionate Conservative Party. Hoodies were to be hugged, environmental goals
embraced, and most tellingly of all, rather than deny
the relevance of ‘society’, he wanted to create
a ‘Big Society’. I am not concerned here about how real or radical these
changes were, but instead just note that he felt a change of image was
necessary to end the Conservative’s run of election defeats. The fact that they
did not win the 2010 election outright perhaps suggests the strength and
toxicity of the nasty brand.
What a difference a few years make. As the government finds it
more and more difficult to cut government spending on goods and services, it
aims austerity at welfare spending. There is plenty that has already happened,
some well known, some not. As to the future, here is Paul Johnson of the IFS talking about
the implications of the latest Autumn Statement. The scale of cuts he is
talking about for welfare are huge (particularly if state pensions are ring
fenced), yet they appear to be Osborne’s preferred option. The Conservative’s current Party
Chairman and an influential MP have recently suggested restricting benefits for
those with more than two children, to encourage ‘more responsible’ decisions
about procreation. Never mind the impact this would have on those children.
Changes to welfare already introduced, together with falling
real wages, have led to a huge rise in the use of food banks in the UK. Here
is data from the Trussell Trust, one of the main operators of voluntary food
banks. 346,992 people received a minimum of three days emergency food from
Trussell Trust food banks in 2012-13, compared to 26,000 in 2008-09. Of those
helped in 2012-13, 126,889 (36.6 percent) were children. The Red Cross is to start
distributing food aid in the UK, for the first time since WWII. A letter from doctors to the British Medical
Journal talks about a potential public health emergency involving malnutrition.
It is undeniable that benefit changes are a big factor behind these
developments, yet the government seems intent on hiding this fact.
Actions are of course more important than rhetoric, but
rhetoric can help define image. It is undeniable that ministers, including the Prime Minister and Chancellor, have attempted to portray the poor
and unemployed as personally responsible for their position due to some
character failure. Even a proud institution like HM Treasury cannot resist being part of this process.
(‘Hard-working families’ looks like going the same way as ‘taxpayers money’, becoming a routine
slight against either the unemployed or the poor.) Both Cameron and Osborne
will be too careful to emulate Romney’s 47% moment,
but too many Conservative MPs appear to share
the attitudes of some
of those on the US right.
So what accounts for this U turn from compassion to disparagement?
The recession is one answer, which has hardened social attitudes. The success of UKIP, the political wing of the majority of UK
newspapers, is another. [1] Yet it seems incredible that a political
calculation that appeared valid before 2010 can have been so completely
reversed in just a few years. Even Theresa May, whose speech
started this blog, has joined in on the act. There are those vans of course, but asking landlords to check
the immigration status of tenants is an incredibly stupid and harmful policy. We will see in 2015
whether it pays to be nasty. [2]
Yet even if the strategy works in the short term, and even
recognising that politicians often do questionable things to gain votes, this just
seems a step too far. It is one thing to create hardship because you believe
this is a necessary price to improve the system or reduce its cost. Perhaps you
really believe that cutting
the top rate of tax at the same time as cutting welfare will benefit everyone eventually.
But it is quite another thing to try and deflect any criticism by unjustly
blaming those who earn too little, or who are trying to find work. That just
seems immoral.
I suspect Cameron as the Compassionate Conservative would have
agreed. He would have also noted that, although nastiness might accord with
voter sentiments today, at some point in the future voters in more generous
times will have no problem forgetting this, and just remembering the
Conservatives as the nasty party. As Christmas approaches, this tale from Charles
Dickens seems apt.
[1] For those who are offended by this sentence, let me say
this. There are two obvious explanations for the correlation between UKIPs
policies and the views of the Telegraph, Mail and Sun. One involves the
causality implied by the sentence and the post that it links to. The other is
that newspapers just reflect the concerns of voters. But if the latter is true
why do they (with the odd exception) just reflect the views of voters on the
right, rather than those on the left? And why do the mistaken beliefs of voters
tend to correlate with the impressions created by these newspapers, as I note here?
[2] Even if it does, I strongly suspect one casualty will be
the LibDems. If their leader spoke out as Vince Cable has done, they might just have a chance of not
being associated with these policies and attitudes. But he has not, and as a
result the party is in serious danger of losing many votes and I suspect much of its activist
base.