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How conservatism can survive Brexit

Credit: Dan Kitwood/Getty Images

Credit: Dan Kitwood/Getty Images


April 4, 2019   6 mins

Brexit became a process of ongoing agony, for pretty much everyone, at some point in the autumn of 2018. It is now a particularly intense form of agony for the Conservative Party, which faces the real prospect of an irreconciliable split. Whether May tacks towards a no-deal Brexit, or a soft Brexit of a customs-union-perhaps-plus-single-market, one wing of the Cabinet will debate whether to resign.

In the middle of the drama, there is a tendency to focus on the personalities and the short-term dynamics behind the current Cabinet’s tension. To do so is to miss how today’s political weather reflects the long-term prospects for the climate.

What’s at stake for the Conservative party now is whether it can pivot to take advantage of the new political landscape that 2016 inaugurated. The alternative for the party is that it is broken by the forces that are pushing for a realignment of British politics. That would be bad news for the Conservative party. I think, on balance, that it would also be bad for the country, but there is less certainty here.

What is certain is that the traditional Left-Right division of politics is outdated. It fails to capture the complexity of the electorate’s actual political views. The Left-Right division is defined principally by economics: to what extent is prosperity best served by redistributive welfare policies and market intervention to correct its excesses, or by low taxes and letting the market rip?

A cluster of other issues are better defined as social. They concern what makes for a flourishing life, beyond how much money you have in the bank. The contrast in social attitudes is something like the following: to what extent is human flourishing best served by celebrating the power of individuals to seek the life they choose, or by pursuing committed relationships in stable, ordered communities?

The key policy area that elicits different reactions here is immigration, with supranational institutions a related touchstone. The difference in general outlook has wider ramifications: on law and order, family policy, human rights and civil liberties, defence and security, and so on.

In some work on the electorate in France – Brahmin Left vs Merchant Right: Rising Inequality & the Changing Structure of Political Conflict (Evidence from France, Britain and the US, 1948-2017) – Thomas Piketty used two questions to elicit where people stood on these two axes. Are you for or against more redistribution? Do you think there are too many immigrants in France? As both of these are yes/no questions, the electorate can then be divided up into four groups: those who are for more redistribution and more immigration; those who are opposed to more immigration and more redistribution; those who want more redistribution but less immigration; and those who want less redistribution and more migration. Interestingly, roughly a quarter of the electorate in France now falls into each of these categories.

Piketty’s working paper focuses on an important point, which is a populist one, that the heat of the Left-Right controversy between the major political parties has hidden their collusion in keeping immigration off the political agenda. In the terms of the title of his working paper, the ‘Brahmin Left’ and the ‘Merchant Right’ both support immigration, the first for social reasons, the latter for economic.

Piketty’s work does not answer, however, a different and crucial question: which of these cleavages is the more important one, in terms of how people look at the world? Do more people feel strongly about the economic cleavage, or about the social one?

The question of which cleavage is more salient matters because of the effects of a two-party political structure. A two-party structure forces you to identify only one of these cleavages as the central basis on which political debate occurs, and on which a party makes its policy offer to the electorate.

The UK’s existing two-party system has privileged the economic cleavage over the social one; so has the French one, until recently.

The priority of the economic cleavage over the social cleavage was under strain before the 2016 referendum on EU membership. The dynamics of the referendum have decisively shifted this, however. The referendum question formally asked for your view on whether the UK should leave the institutions of the EU, and there are a variety of pros and cons about that policy.

Because we reason by heuristics and emotions – the hot, fast, cognitively frugal elements of what psychologists call ‘System 1’ – what the question actually elicited in the great majority of cases was your social outlook: cosmopolitan, individualist globalists vs rooted, communitarian nationalists. This is true for both Leavers and Remainers, and we’ve all spent three years rehearsing the reasons why our side is right.

I tend to follow the BBC’s output for roughly the reason that Kremlinologists read Pravda: that it’s the best way to know what the powers that be think. A recent piece, Allan Little’s ‘Looking for Brexitland’, had some insight, however:

“Brexit has driven a fracture through both the two big Westminster parties. The divide in the House of Commons might still, formally, be between a Conservative government and a Labour-dominated opposition. But in the country, politics has realigned. The divide out here, beyond the Westminster bubble, is between Remainers and Leavers.”

Some new polling by Michael Ashcroft has confirmed with data what Little – and you and I – have discerned anecdotally: that there has been a decisive shift towards the priority of the social cleavage over the economic.

Ashcroft showed two things. First, voters’ mental associations for the two existing parties are effectively unchanged in a decade. The Tories are the party of entitled aristocrats; Labour are the party of welfare scroungers. Both are still defined by their historic economic positions.

Second, he asked people to imagine there was a new offer. ‘New Party A’ would be supportive of immigration, want action on climate change, promote rehabilitation in criminal justice, support international aid and supranational institutions generally. ‘New Party B’ would reduce immigration, argue that climate change had been exaggerated, take a tougher line on law and order, spend the aid budget in the UK instead, think that traditional values had been neglected and that the UK was becoming a nanny state. Their respective positions on relations with the EU are obvious. Call these the ‘Progressives’ and the ‘Nationals’.

The results were striking. In this fictional contest, Conservative and Labour are reduced to rumps, at 18% and 14% respectively. The Progressives come second, at 24%. The Nationals come first, at 27%. The Progressives and the Nationals lead on social issues, while Conservative and Labour lead on economic. The point is that making social issues salient leads to decisive change in how people say they would vote.

What are the implications of this for the present political moment?

Because social issues now matter more than economic ones, for more people, there is a realignment coming at some point. The offer that the two parties give to the electorate will shift from being rival answers to how to cut (and bake) the pie. It will shift to a contest over which conception of society – diverse versus ordered – wins out. The precise mechanics of how this will happen are uncertain, but that it will happen just reflects the fact that one’s position on the social cleavage now matters to people.

For good or ill, the Conservatives have been the custodians of Brexit. If they fail to deliver it, in terms that Leavers recognise, they will permanently mark their brand as Merchant Right – interested in self-enrichment and disloyal to the country – and not to be trusted by those concerned for an ordered, communal focused view of society. That we are looking at a super-soft Brexit reflects Conservative MPs’ priorities, where pro-business and socially liberal outlooks are the norm. It does not reflect that of the majority of their voters.

Among the many lessons that people ought to have learnt in 2016, one was delivered with force to Paul Ryan: parties that fail to represent their electorate’s actual views are in a precarious position. In the Republican party’s case, they were vulnerable to hostile take-over due to the primaries system.

In the Conservative party’s case, if it fails to pivot to the new reality, it will be vulnerable to political entrepreneurs who offer, outside the party, the social conservatism that a large portion of the electorate want. Labour’s offer is already defined by the kind of social liberalism that appeals to the tertiary educated who spend their time manipulating symbols on computer screens. This is not territory that the Conservative party will be able to win on, nor ought it to want to. If the Conservatives fail to provide a genuine alternative, someone else will.

Equally, if they manage to pivot to the new reality, there is a significant opportunity. This would be good for the party. Insofar as the coalition that the party would then provide is a moderating influence on the excesses of each wing, it would also, I think, be good for the country.


Tom Simpson is a Professor of Philosophy and Public Policy at the University of Oxford’s Blavatnik School of Government.


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