There will also be more direct questions for Johnson. With a majority of his own he will no longer be able to leave his political creed undefined. One question more than any other will hang over his time in office: what is Johnson-ism? Is it just a pragmatic and adaptable brand of liberal-conservatism that claims to stand in the Disraeli or Macmillan tradition?
Or, as David Goodhart notes in this publication, does a victory signal the arrival of a more intellectually interesting brand of conservatism that is more akin to a cross-class Christian Democracy than the rebirth of Thatcherism? Furthermore, is Johnson merely reactive to public opinion or does there lurk a more coherent and even philosophical body of thought which, protected by a majority, is willing to take on the deeper and intractable policy challenges in modern Britain?
For a defeated Jeremy Corbyn and Labour Party, the questions will be much harder to answer. Corbynistas are already avoiding the awkward fact that throughout this entire campaign, they have never come within six points of an incumbent Conservative Party that has been in office for nearly a decade. The hopes of Britain’s main opposition party are now limited to a hung Parliament and what would almost certainly be a fragile, chaotic and short-lived Labour-led coalition or alliance, if that is even possible.
In some other, alternate universe, you might expect a decade-long economic squeeze, austerity and a highly divisive debate over Britain’s place in the world to propel a progressive, internationalist party of the left to the very forefront, if not firmly into the lead. But Corbynism has spent this campaign like it spent much of the past two years: firmly adrift in the polls.
This speaks to another question that will likely be raised by the 2019 election: is Labour still a party of the working class? Look at the latest polls and the answer is, clearly, no. Perhaps one of the most damning assessments of Corbynism is reflected in the fact that a Conservative Party led by an Eton and Oxford graduate now enjoys commanding leads in blue-collar Britain. Boris Johnson has grasped one of the new, unwritten laws in politics: that it is much easier for the Right to move Left on economics than it is for the Left to move Right on culture.
But he is also helped by a Labour project that often appears to be pushing away the very socially conservative and patriotic workers that it needs to endure. If there is another defeat, then, where does Labour go from here? If Corbynism is an ideological rather than an electoral project then when will the moderates leave the building? With the local associations sewn up and an instinctively pro-Corbyn membership it seems unlikely that a post-election civil war within Labour would leave the dwindling number of moderates in charge. Is it then finally time to accept the inevitable and depart en masse?
For Labour there will be no easy answers to any of this. The 2019 election will probably underline how Labour has, to all intents and purposes, broken into two distinct parties. On one side stand an awkward alliance of socially liberal white-collar professionals, students and ethnic minorities who reside in London, a few other big cities and the university towns. Together, these groups comprise what Thomas Piketty calls the “Brahmin Left”; a faction that is far more interested in expressing its social liberalism and pro-Remain views than delivering genuine economic reform and solidarity for Labour’s traditional voters.
On the other stand those blue-collar and socially conservative workers who reside in small towns, Labour’s northern heartlands and Wales. As we first pointed out five years ago in Revolt on the Right, these are voters who feel left behind not only by the economic transformation of Britain but also by the sudden rise of social or even “hyper” social liberalism, a creed cherished by the Brahmin Left but which workers neither support nor respect.
This is as much about value loss as economic loss. Consistently, for more than a decade, Labour has been losing ground among the latter group, who lean left on the economy but a little right on culture and identity. When the Brahmin Left reduces their instinctive social conservatism to racism or xenophobia, it simply confirms the rumours that are now circulating through blue-collar Britain: that Labour is no longer a home for them. Given that these groups hold fundamentally irreconcilable values, it is not easy to see how they can be held together either at this election or the one after.
Whatever happens in the early hours of Friday morning, it seems likely that the general election of 2019 will not only be remembered for providing answers to our Brexit crisis but also for raising deeper questions about the changing nature of our politics: the shifting sands that lie beneath our two main parties and a broader realignment that seems to be coming ever more into focus.
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