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Nightmare on Downing Street
Monday 18th April 2005
If the Conservatives under Michael Howard really did win the keys to No 10 next month, what kind of Britain could we expect? Would we leave the EU? What would happen to the minimum wage? By John Kampfner.
It is May 2009. A general election has been called. Michael Howard,
the Prime Minister, has just handed over to his successor, David Cameron,
after four years in Downing Street. If this had come to pass, what
would Britain have lived through? How much would have changed?
The manifesto
that the Conservative leader launched on 11 April provides some clues,
but only some. The policy prescription is sketchy. The tax-and-spend
arguments beg more questions than answers. But a combination of precedent,
instinct and announcements suggests that a Howard government would
reverse the very mild and stealthy redistribution of income that Labour
has presided over. The default Tory approach to the NHS and to state
education would be that they are not up to the job and that ways have
to be found to circumvent them. The default approach to the role of
the state would be to reduce it where possible, in the name of freedom
and deregulation. The beneficiaries of Conservative largesse would
be those parts of Middle England that might use public services but
would rather go private given the chance. Comfortable pensioners would
see provision improve roughly in line with a reduction in emphasis
on the elderly poor. As for "foreigners", asylum-seekers,
immigrants, gypsies and their like, a Howard administration would
compete with tabloid papers in a cycle of grievance that we have
not suffered for several decades.
The atmospherics - the "give us our country back" tone
of Howard's statements - provide a clear indication of the kind of
government he would like to bequeath. The most invisible issue of
the campaign, Europe, may provide the first and most consistent form
of confrontation. Howard says he will hold a British referendum on
the EU constitution within six months of taking office. With a government
urging a No vote, the result would be a foregone conclusion. Rejection
would, whatever the protestations to the contrary, very likely lead
to negotiations on withdrawal. The Europeans would have no incentive
to be amenable to a British request for "associate" status
- being part of the single market but not much more. The UK would
be even more marginalised than in the dying years of John Major's
rule, during his six-month period of "non-cooperation" over
the beef ban. Howard would talk up the malevolence of Brussels, playing
to a sense of "injustice". Ultimately, however, he would
have to cut a deal, and the consequences for the UK economy would
not be beneficial.
Diplomatically, Howard would be in a bind. He would
move quickly to ingratiate himself with a US administration that
did not appreciate his unconvincing lurch from ardent supporter of
the Iraq war to critic. A Conservative PM overcompensating for past
transatlantic "lapses" could
come under strong pressure to support a new American military adventure.
Having broken with Europe, he would have no other significant allies
on which to balance UK interests. On international development, he
has pledged to stick to Labour's still-paltry budget, but would lack
the international clout to lead a more coherent strategy for Africa,
which at least Tony Blair and Gordon Brown have tried.
Unlike the
instant decisions that often govern foreign policy, economic change
is a more gradual process, as much a product of management skill
as ideological direction. The Conservatives have tied themselves
to Labour spending plans in health and education, and for all the
heated claims and counter-claims over black holes in these plans,
the proportion of public spending of gross national product would
vary only slightly in a first Tory term. The greater ambition for
tax cuts, for which the sacked Tory MP Howard Flight was punished,
would follow in a second term.
Labour has in recent days shifted its
attacks. After accusing the Conservatives of having a hidden agenda
of cuts, it is now focusing on irresponsibility and mathematical
ignorance or deceit. But it is the allocation of resources, rather
than the size of the pot, that reveals most about Tory first-term
priorities. They have concluded that Labour's focus on means-tested
credits for the poorest pensioners is humiliating and complicated.
Their pledge to increase pensions in line with earnings rather than
savings - just as activists such as Jack Jones and Barbara Castle
advocated for years - marks a return to greater universalism, a perfectly
legitimate but different approach. At the same time, they deny they
would scrap the pension credits for the hardest-hit, but they almost
certainly would allow them to wither away.
To pay for some of their
commitments, the Tories have pledged to abolish the New Deal, one
of the most ambitious of the policies introduced in 1997. Parts of
it have been inefficient and costly, but it has given training and
work experience to hundreds of thousands of long-term unemployed,
not to speak of the broader benefits in terms of crime and social
exclusion. On other areas, the Conservatives are vague. Unlike in
2001, they no longer promise to abolish the minimum wage. But the
experience of the US Republicans suggests it would either be frozen
or raised below inflation. The same could apply for a number of welfare
benefits and, presumably, for the plethora of child credits introduced
by Brown. The Tories know they cannot repudiate the targets for cutting
child poverty, but they have said little to suggest it would remain
a serious project.
The left's critique of Blair - that he has done
too little in addressing the wealth gap and has been far too timid
in introducing social legislation that tempers the market - remains
as valid as ever. But what little has been done would almost certainly
be undone. Howard's pledge to withdraw from the EU social chapter
would allow him to reverse measures such as equal protection of part-time
workers and ensuring that Bank Holidays are not counted as part of
annual holidays. The reprioritising of personal freedom over fairness
of outcome would particularly resonate in public services. Tory plans
to pay for private schooling as long as the cost does not exceed
a place at a state school, and to pay half the cost of a private
hospital operation are perfectly coherent and legitimate, but would
favour the section of the population that already knows its way around
the system - the middle class.
There is one area where the Tories
have inadvertently aligned themselves with progressives on the left.
Bizarrely, for a party that until recently regarded constitutional
reform as anathema, they are now calling for a substantially elected
House of Lords and a smaller House of Commons, with stronger select
committees and more time to scrutinise legislation. Policies such
as these, however, tend to be the first that are ditched when opposition
turns to government. Elsewhere, the proposal to give parliament
a free vote to overturn the hunting ban is predictable, as would
be a free vote on reducing the time limit for abortions, something
a third-term Labour government would come under similar pressure
to offer. On other social issues, the Tories appear reconciled
to a more liberal consensus. In a recent interview with a gay magazine,
Howard apologised for his party's past support for Section 28,
which he introduced in the 1980s, banning the "promotion" of
gay lifestyles in schools. Yet the profile of the shadow cabinet,
predominantly public school-educated men in their fifties and sixties,
suggests values somewhere between non-metropolitan and anti-metropolitan,
using the meaningless and catch-all term political correctness
to denounce shifts in society they disapprove of. This might not
amount to much more than rhetoric, however, as recent governments
have learned to tread carefully. It is on crime and race issues that
the Conservatives have made such an impact in the campaign. Given
the support they are receiving in the tabloid press, and the lead
they are enjoying on the issues in the polls, nothing would suggest
any backtracking in government, even at the risk of antagonising
some MPs on the more liberal wing of the party. Where the parties
differ is more on the tone than in the detail of the policies. Howard
has sought to reinforce in voters' minds a subliminal link between
asylum, immigration, crime, terrorism and insecurity. He would feel
under few constraints as prime minister, engaged in an auction of
rhetoric with the newspapers about the perceived unfairness felt
by the indigenous population. If his attempts to withdraw from the
1951 UN refugee convention and to find ways of extricating the UK
from the European convention on human rights were opposed by the
courts, he would use this resistance to bolster his populist standing.
The same would apply to crime. As home secretary, he was proud of
his record in raising the prison numbers and revelled in denouncing
judges for chal-lenging him on sentencing and other decisions.
All
the forecasts above are predicated on what would be an almost unprecedented
election reverse for a ruling party. The a Conservative victory
might be remote, the chances of a working majority more remote
still. Governments are con-strained by global forces in many areas
of economic and social policy. The machinery of Whitehall and pre-assigned
spending would act as a further brake on sudden change. Iraq aside,
the most potent criticism of Blair is his excessive timidity in temper-ing
markets with measures that will make a more than marginal change
to society. In the media, a Howard government would face fewer constraints.
And when frustrated over his scope to cut taxes or to make a difference
in complex areas of public policy, there is a rich seam of grievance
that he can tap into to leave his mark.
This article first appeared in the New
Statesman and may not be reproduced
without permission.
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