I went to see how the Tories are handling defeat – and found Faragism and a total lack of reflection
The Bruges Group celebrated its 35th anniversary last week in the august portals of the Army and Navy club in Pall Mall in central London. The group was formed in 1989 and, in case you weren’t around back then, ignited the great split in the Tory party, after Margaret Thatcher made a speech in Bruges calling a halt to any closer federalism in Europe. Though she was never mad enough to be a leaver, this group used her words to send the first Brexit snowball rolling downhill until it turned into the avalanche that finally broke the Tory party into pieces. They spread Europhobia through their party until all candidates had to test positive for Brexit. Now many of their members, including the group’s president, Norman Tebbit, are joining a new rebellion, clamouring to merge with the Faragists. “What you are seeing is a revolution!” one hissed at me. “There’s no going back!”
Days after their party’s worst ever election defeat, I was expecting more of a wake. But no tears were being shed for their deceased government or fallen MPs. Instead a gleeful “we told you so” filled the room, which often devolved into naked hatred for their defunct government. From a lectern decked with a portrait of Thatcher, the chair, former MP Barry Legg, said that in “its 14 years in office, it’s not been a Conservative government at all. It’s been a big state party.” The claim that “One Nation took over the party” raised jeers. (Odd this, as the One Nationers were notably silent over ever-more extreme policies.)
“Sunak never had the interest of the country” drew more hissing, with contempt for his “gimcrack manifesto”. The chair yearned for some “figure of substance and integrity to emerge as a leader........
© The Guardian
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