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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: Britain
: 2001
Election
British Conservatives' proposed tax cut backfires
By Julie Hyland
17 May 2001
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One week into the British general election campaign, and the
media can barely contain their frustration with William Hague's
Conservative Party.
Trailing badly in the opinion polls, the Tories unveiled their
election manifesto last Thursday, identifying four main themes
they hope will put clear blue water between themselves and the
Labour government. Tax cuts worth £8 billion, a pledge to
"save the pound" (stop Britain's adoption of the European
single currency), a clampdown on asylum seekers and tougher measures
on crime were given top billing. Under the slogan "common
sense", Hague speaks of preserving a British way of life,
endangered by Labour's reform of aspects of the constitution and
its creeping "political correctness".
But whilst much of the press expressed sympathy with Hague's
plans, they complained that the Conservative leader was not being
"radical" enough. The tax cut pledge is another blatant
attempt to emulate the policies of the Republican Party in the
US. Yet the party is extremely vulnerable to claims that its tax
cuts would further endanger an already severely strapped public
sector. The press leaked that, in private, the Conservatives were
toying with making tax cuts of up £20bn during the first
term of any government they formed. According to the Financial
Times, a shadow cabinet minister had earlier disclosed that
the present £8 billion pledge was part of a longer-term
rolling programme of tax cuts. This long-term "aspiration"
would mean public expenditure falling as a proportion of gross
domestic product towards 35 percent, its lowest for more than
three decades. Amidst demands that the Conservatives name which
schools and hospitals would have to close as a result, Hague was
immediately placed in a defensive positionrefusing to comment
on the £20 billion figure and reiterating his more modest
pledge for tax cuts.
Hague's refusal to grasp the nettle led to strong criticism,
even amongst those broadly supportive of Tory aims. The press
lamented the Conservatives' hesitancy in clearly setting out a
right wing stall. There is already concern amongst some sections
of the ruling class that Blair's susceptibility to public opinion
could mean that, under conditions of an economic recession with
tens of thousands losing their jobs, a Labour government will
not have the necessary resolve to press ahead with cuts in public
spending and other unpopular measures. If Labour should falter,
however, the Tories' disarray would leave big business with no
one able to step into the breach on its behalf.
A similar dilemma is faced by capital across Europe, Financial
Times columnist Martin Wolf pointed out on May 14. Only Italy's
Silvio Berlusconi seems to have bucked the trend of the right's
political crisis, but that has been achieved by creating an entirely
new right wing structure, Forza Italia, which in alliance with
fascists and separatists has replaced the "moribund centre-right
parties of old".
Wolf sets out four alternative visions for Britain's Conservatives.
The nationalist variant has unfortunately been cornered by others
in Scotland and Wales, and an outright appeal to English nationalism
would threaten Tory commitment to preserving the United Kingdom,
he states. Right-wing populism would appeal "strongly"
to a minority, but it is not clear that it is a big vote winner.
Hague could position his party "marginally to the right of
Labour" and hope for the tide to turn. Finally, the Tories
could articulate an "alternative philosophy" based on
the small state, a big overhaul of the tax and welfare system
and greater private sector involvement in health and educationthe
Bush option.
Instead, Wolf complains that Hague seems to be attempting an
eclectic mix of all four. "For a brief period in the 1970s
and 1980s, the Tories ceased to be the stupid party. Under Mr
Hague this seems no longer true".
Wolf puts the absence of a Tory vision down to the opposition's
lack of intellectual rigour. Setting aside the implied assumption
that the Labour Party is populated by great thinkers, in reality
the Tories' ideological morass is the result of political divisions
within the party, which in turn express deep social fissures within
the country as a whole.
Throughout most of its political life, the Conservative Party
managed to combine its role as the traditional party of British
capital with maintaining a strong base of support amongst substantial
layers of the middle class. This has been undermined by the changes
in global economy. Whilst those sections of British capital oriented
to the international markets have benefited, along with a thin
layer of the privileged upper middle class, smaller sections of
nationally-based capital, along with a large segment of the former
middle classes, face increasing hardship and insecurity. The result
was the virtual wipe out of the Conservatives in the 1997 general
election and a continuous policy war within the party.
Hague's commitment to oppose British entry into the euro is
targeted at the weaker sections of British business which fear
international competition will drive them to the wall. But it
is a policy opposed by internationally based corporations, many
of whom only located in Britain in order to have cheap, ready
access to the European market.
In an interview with the Financial Times, May 8, Hague
agreed that the party's stance on the euro was most popular amongst
small business before assuring the FT's readership, "We
do not see corporate Britain as an enemy in any way". That
a Conservative leader should have to make such a statement is
remarkable. Aimed at refuting allegations that the Tories were
losing big business backing to Labour, it only serves to emphasise
the shifting political landscape in Britain.
In its efforts to re-ingratiate itself with corporate Britain,
the Tory Party risks queering its pitch to "Middle England".
Hague's commitment to tax cuts was framed as a concession to all
those hit by Labour's increases in indirect taxation. The Tory
leader pledged to cut £1 billion from spending by a crackdown
on benefit fraud and further savings would be made by privatisations.
But the Institute for Fiscal Studies showed that Hague's proposals
would overwhelmingly favour the highest earners, with the richest
10 percent of the population gaining ten times more than the poorest.
More importantly, greater cuts in public spending would wreck
the vital services on which the overwhelming majority of working
people and their families depend.
Former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher has let her own vision
of the Tories' future be known. In the closing days of Berlusconi's
campaign, Thatcher issued a letter published in all Italian newspapers
calling on voters to turn out en masse to ensure his victory.
The crisis of perspective facing the Conservatives will ultimately
have to be fought out openly, and there are indications that the
end result will not be a united organisation. The tenor of the
type of showdown looming within the party after the election can
be judged in the comments of former Conservative Prime Minister
Edward Heath in an interview in the right-wing Spectator
magazine marking his retirement from parliament. Published just
as Hague prepared to launch the party's manifesto, Heath, who
was ousted as party leader by Thatcher in 1975 and is identified
with the "One Nation" wing of the Conservatives, derided
the Tory leader as a "laughing stock" and forecast that,
"the most likely thing [in the election] is that we shan't
win".
See Also:
Britain's general election: The disenfranchisement
of the working class and the need for a new socialist party
[17 May 2001]
Racism row continues to embroil Britain's
Conservatives
[4 May 2001]
Hypocrisy over racism in run
up to British general election
[23 April 2001]
Britain's Conservative Party
exposes its racist underbelly
[3 April 2001]
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