MPs move towards third ballot
The remaining four candidates set out their stalls at the Party Conference in Birmingham
I did not attend the Conservative Party Conference this year
(in truth, I haven’t been in years) but this conference represented a major
milestone in the 2024 Conservative Leadership Election, as the four remaining
candidates to replace Rishi Sunak set out their respective stalls to the Party
faithful last week.
The importance of this stage of the contest can hardly be overstated.
It is not a regular feature of Tory leadership elections but the last time it
happened it was considered quite decisive. For this, one must cast one’s mind
back nearly 20 years, to the 2005 Leadership Election. David Davis entered that
contest looking like the ‘obvious successor’ to outgoing leader Michael Howard.
Then, as now, we were in Opposition and candidates were vying to become the
next Leader of the Opposition.
At the 2005 conference in Blackpool, Mr. Davis delivered his
big speech but was widely perceived to have performed poorly. I watched the speech,
and I would say it was competent but underwhelming. Meanwhile, Mr. Davis’ younger
rival, David Cameron, gave a barnstormer of a speech, delivered without notes, and
Mr. Cameron ultimately left Blackpool as the darling of Conference. It led to a
steep turnaround in their relative chances. That morning, Mr. Davis had been the
clear favourite, with Mr. Cameron trailing in third place behind Kenneth Clarke.
By that same evening, the bookies had Mr. Cameron as the odds-on frontrunner. As
we all know, Mr. Cameron went on to win the leadership and, in due course, the
2010 and 2015 general elections.
I have tagged each speaker with a link to their speech on
YouTube.
The first up on the main stage in Birmingham last week was
Shadow Security Minister Tom Tugendhat.
I would characterise the Colonel’s speech as brimming with sincerity and high purpose,
but a bit of a damp squib, in that it lacked that ‘wow’ factor he really needed
to deliver at this stage of the contest. It was a bit like one of those
fireworks, that goes up making all the right noises, only to fizzle out with an
anticlimactic ‘pop’. His relative lack of experience speaking at this level
probably showed. I anticipate that the Colonel will be the first to be
eliminated when MPs vote this week, but he can hold his head up high, having
fought a plucky rearguard action and I suspect he will feature prominently in
the Shadow Cabinet of whomever succeeds Mr. Sunak.
Next up was Shadow Home Secretary James Cleverly.
His speech is being widely touted as the break-out performance of the match.
Colonel Cleverly, who came in third place in the first two MP ballots in
September, has steadily been building momentum and delivered an assured
performance. He is probably the most experienced of the remaining four candidates,
as I outlined in my previous
blog. He also wins the prize for the best jokes, particularly a good line
about being mobilised as a reservist and assuming he would be sent to Baghdad
or Basra and being sent… to Luton. Although he arrived in Birmingham trailing
behind Mr. Jenrick and Mrs Badenoch, the Colonel left Conference with a spring
in his step and the wind in his sails and is now the bookies’ favourite to make
it into the final two with Mr. Jenrick. Colonel Cleverly actually came to
Billericay on Friday and addressed members of the Basildon & Billericay
Conservative Association and he was very impressive.
Former Immigration Minister Robert
Jenrick was the penultimate speaker, currently seen as the frontrunner
and, at 42 years of age, the youngest of the candidates. Mr. Jenrick is an
interesting guy. Formerly seen as a broadly centrist politician, he has recently
manœuvred himself to the right of the Party, shouldering past more established figures
like Suella Braverman and Dame Priti Patel. He gave a strong performance in
Birmingham, and he too put in appearance in Billericay, a week or so before
Colonel Cleverly. On both occasions, he majored on immigration and leaving the
European Convention on Human Rights. If I am being brutally honest, I worry
that Mr. Jenrick is a bit of a one-trick pony on immigration, and I cannot say
I found myself entirely convinced that leaving the ECHR is the kind of panacea
he seems to think it is. I would not say his speech was a gamechanger. He
delivered it without notes or autocue, but it did not lift the roof off Conference
like Cameron in ’05.
The final speaker was Shadow Housing Secretary Kemi Badenoch,
who is in many ways the ‘firebrand’ candidate in this contest. She gave an
uncompromisingly robust speech, centred around hard truths and the need to
renew both the Tory Party and the country. There is no denying the attractiveness
of her plain-speaking, no-nonsense attitude. My only concern remains a worry
that she is just too enmeshed in culture wars that turn off, or simply do not
interest, huge sections of the electorate. She dropped a couple of clangers at
Conference, seeming to oppose maternity pay (comments she later clarified) and
suggesting some civil servants wanted ‘locking up’. But her pitch on stage went
well and I suspect she will have been happy with how it went down in the hall.
The ball now goes back into the MPs’ court, with a further
ballot this afternoon to reduce the remaining four to three, then another
ballot tomorrow, which will give us the final two, who will be presented to the
Party membership.
I saw an analysis somewhere (apologies, I can’t remember
where, so cannot attribute) that compared the process to the ‘Sorting Hat’ in “Harry
Potter”. In this analysis, Colonel Tugendhat was ‘Ravenclaw’ for his intellect
and attention to detail. Colonel Cleverly was ‘Hufflepuff’ for his steadfastness
and Party loyalty. Mr. Jenrick was ‘Slytherin’ for his cunning and ambition.
While Mrs Badenoch was ‘Gryffindor’ for her courage and indefatigability. I
think I would broadly subscribe to that. All four candidates have great
strengths.
I shall be lobbying our local MP, Richard Holden, to support James Cleverly. We should get the results of the penultimate MPs’ ballot at 3:30 p.m. and then the final ballot ahead of the membership vote will take place tomorrow.