Former Tory minister says leadership hopefuls ‘too frightened of party membership’ – UK politics live | Politics
Senior Tory: leadership candidates 'too frightened of party membership' to get to root cause of election defeat
Former justice minister David Gauke has cautioned that the current contest for the Conservative party leadership is failing to learn the lesson of why the party suffered such a huge defeat in the general election, and the crop of candidates are“too frightened of the party membership”.
In an interview on Times Radio, he told listeners “You want it to be a respectful leadership campaign. You don’t want lots of abuse. But the Conservative party suffered a massive defeat in July, its worst performance in its history, and there’s an awful lot of soul searching that needs to be done.
“And in the end, whoever wins this contest isn’t going to be able to lead on the basis of unity. You’re actually going to have to have a platform and demonstrate leadership, and hope to persuade people to fall in behind you. Appeals to unity aren’t going to cut it if you are not making progress in the opinion polls, if you are not looking like an alternative government.”
Kemi Badenoch, James Cleverly, Robert Jenrick, Priti Patel, Mel Stride and Tom Tugendhat are running to be leader.
Gauke was one of several MPs suspended from the party by then prime minister Boris Johnson in 2019 over his votes on Brexit issues. He told Times Radio he had now rejoined the party in order to have his say in the leadership contest.
He suggested that one element in the contest might be people seeking to emulate “a very successful model deployed in 2020 by Keir Starmer.”
Gauke said “[Starmer] ran as a continuity candidate. Then about a year after he won, changed strategy, demonstrated some leadership, was a ‘change’ leader trying to modernise his party, and that resulted in success.
“At the moment, you feel that all of the [Conservative leadership] candidates are too tentative to do that, that they’re too frightened of the party membership. Maybe thinking get through on the other side, and then who knows what you can do. But at the moment, by and large, they do feel as if they’re just sort of wanting to get there first and then we’ll do the modernisation afterwards.”
“The difficulty with that strategy is that you don’t have a mandate, and that people will cry betrayal, and that you might not have the authority you need to do what I think has to be a very big, very ambitious modernisation of the party.”
Key events
Labour’s secretary of state for Scotland, Kirsty McNeill, has also reacted to the economic news from the country today. In a statement the MP for Midlothian said:
Today’s figures are encouraging but there is still a lot of work to do and the UK government is going to deliver the change the country needs. Giving people support to join the workforce and the security they need to remain in fairly paid jobs is vital as we tackle poverty and grow the economy.
We’re banning exploitative zero-hours contracts, we’ve taken the first steps to make the national minimum wage a real living wage, and we’re planning JobCentre reform.
Labour market statistics have shown Scotland’s GDP grew by 0.3% in May, and the Scottish government says the latest figures represent the highest number of payrolled employees in Scotland since July 2014, with median monthly pay the highest recorded yet. [See 10.23 BST]
Rory Carroll
Rory Carroll is the Guardian’s Ireland correspondent
A group of 120 police officers from Scotland is to receive orientation training in Belfast on Tuesday before a week-long deployment to bolster the over-stretched Police Service of Northern Ireland.
The reinforcements, which are specially trained in public order, arrived amid a lull in rioting, with Belfast calm in recent days after torrid scenes last week.
The PSNI chief constable, Jon Boutcher, requested the deployment to relieve a force he said was “exhausted”. The Police Federation of Northern Ireland, which represents officers, said the force was at “breaking point”.
Four men appeared in court on Monday charged with riot-related offences, bringing the total who have been charged with offences to 29. Among them is an 11-year-old boy. Unlike in England and Wales there are no fast-track prosecutions.
Most of the disturbances have been in loyalist areas of Belfast and aimed at immigrants, refugees and Muslims. However on Saturday youths in a republican area of Derry targeted police with stones, fireworks and petrol bombs, injuring 10 officers.
“This was recreational rioting orchestrated probably by dissident republicans,” said Colum Eastwood, the Foyle MP and Social Democratic and Labour Party leader.
Labour market statistics have shown Scotland’s GDP grew by 0.3% in May, and by 0.9% in the three months leading up to May, PA Media reports.
The SNP’s deputy first minister and economy secretary Kate Forbes said:
Today’s figures show the welcome news that payrolled employment and median monthly pay are at record highs. However, many households and businesses are still feeling the effects of harsh trading conditions and the global cost-of-living crisis.
That’s why we are prioritising action to tackle child poverty, grasp the opportunities of net zero and support growth within the restrictions of the devolution settlement.
Over the current financial year, we are investing more than £5bn to drive growth in the economy. We will continue to work with the UK government where we can, while encouraging them to support investment in Scotland’s economy and an end to spending cuts from Westminster.
The figures, published by the Office for National Statistics (ONS), show that from April to June, the estimated unemployment rate in Scotland for people aged 16 and older was 4.4%. The employment rate was 73.4% and the inactivity rate was estimated to be at 23.1%.
The Scottish government says the figures represent the highest number of payrolled employees in Scotland since July 2014. The median monthly pay was estimated by HMRC to be £2,427 in July, the highest recorded yet.
Conservative leadership candidate James Cleverly has also seized on today’s economic news to suggest that things were going well for the economy under Rishi Sunak’s government, which was heavily defeated in July’s general election. Cleverly posted to social media to say:
Inflation down. Employment up. Fastest growth in the G7. That was Labour’s real economic inheritance, but Rachel Reeves still wants to raise your taxes.
It might be a little bit slow on the politics front, but economic news does not have a summer recess. Our economics editor Larry Elliott has an analysis piece today in which he says the jobs market uncertainty is causing a headache for Bank of England rate setters, while Julia Kollewe has the unwelcome news that grocery price inflation in Great Britain has risen for first time in 17 months.
Energy regulator Ofgem has approved a £3.4bn electricity “superhighway” between Scotland and England in the biggest single investment for electricity transmission infrastructure in Britain, PA Media reports.
The 500km (311-mile) project will stretch from Aberdeenshire to North Yorkshire and transport renewable energy.
The joint venture between Scottish and Southern Electricity Networks and National Grid is part of a push to modernise the electricity grid, and Ofgem said it will carry enough renewable electricity to power two million homes.
A lot of MPs are on holiday or working in their constituencies during summer recess, but a handful continue to be very vocal on social media, including Reform UK deputy leader Richard Tice. He has suggested this morning that the number of people crossing the Channel should constitute a “national emergency”.
Tice has also repeated his demand that there should be arrests over violence involving police at Manchester airport several weeks ago. Two police officers are under criminal investigation for assault, and police officers and members of the public were injured in an incident that was widely seen on social media.
UK unemployment falls as wages growth hits lowest in two years
Phillip Inman
The UK jobs market bucked predictions of a further weakening in June after official figures showed unemployment fell but wages growth slowed to its lowest for two years.
Unemployment unexpectedly dropped to 4.2% from 4.4% in the three months to June from the previous three months, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS).
However, wage growth, excluding bonuses, was 5.4% year on year over the three months to June, slipping from 5.7% in the previous three months and represented the smallest increase since the period to July 2022, when it was 5.2%.
Adjusted for inflation, wages rose by 1.6%, meaning many workers will experience a continued improvement in their standard of living.
The chancellor, Rachel Reeves, said: “Today’s figures show there is more to do in supporting people into employment because if you can work, you should work.
“This will be part of my budget later in the year where I will be making difficult decisions on spending, welfare and tax to fix the foundations of our economy so we can rebuild Britain and make every part of our country better off.”
Reeves will deliver her first budget on 30 October.
Read more here: UK unemployment falls as wages growth hits lowest in two years
You can also follow live coverage of reaction to those figures on our business live blog with my colleague Graeme Wearden:
As if to underline David Gauke’s point that the Conservative leadership candidates are yet to show their teeth in the contest, Kemi Badenoch has just merrily retweeted Mel Stride talking about today’s unemployment figures.
In his post, Stride said:
Figures out this morning show unemployment fell and employment rose in the second quarter of this year. More evidence that Labour’s claims of the ‘worst economic inheritance since the second world war’ are complete fantasy. They inherit an unemployment rate half what they left us in 2010.
Senior Tory: leadership candidates 'too frightened of party membership' to get to root cause of election defeat
Former justice minister David Gauke has cautioned that the current contest for the Conservative party leadership is failing to learn the lesson of why the party suffered such a huge defeat in the general election, and the crop of candidates are“too frightened of the party membership”.
In an interview on Times Radio, he told listeners “You want it to be a respectful leadership campaign. You don’t want lots of abuse. But the Conservative party suffered a massive defeat in July, its worst performance in its history, and there’s an awful lot of soul searching that needs to be done.
“And in the end, whoever wins this contest isn’t going to be able to lead on the basis of unity. You’re actually going to have to have a platform and demonstrate leadership, and hope to persuade people to fall in behind you. Appeals to unity aren’t going to cut it if you are not making progress in the opinion polls, if you are not looking like an alternative government.”
Kemi Badenoch, James Cleverly, Robert Jenrick, Priti Patel, Mel Stride and Tom Tugendhat are running to be leader.
Gauke was one of several MPs suspended from the party by then prime minister Boris Johnson in 2019 over his votes on Brexit issues. He told Times Radio he had now rejoined the party in order to have his say in the leadership contest.
He suggested that one element in the contest might be people seeking to emulate “a very successful model deployed in 2020 by Keir Starmer.”
Gauke said “[Starmer] ran as a continuity candidate. Then about a year after he won, changed strategy, demonstrated some leadership, was a ‘change’ leader trying to modernise his party, and that resulted in success.
“At the moment, you feel that all of the [Conservative leadership] candidates are too tentative to do that, that they’re too frightened of the party membership. Maybe thinking get through on the other side, and then who knows what you can do. But at the moment, by and large, they do feel as if they’re just sort of wanting to get there first and then we’ll do the modernisation afterwards.”
“The difficulty with that strategy is that you don’t have a mandate, and that people will cry betrayal, and that you might not have the authority you need to do what I think has to be a very big, very ambitious modernisation of the party.”
Welcome and opening summary …
Welcome to our rolling coverage of UK politics for Tuesday. Here are your headlines …
It is Martin Belam with you today. We are very becalmed in summer recess at the moment, so it might be quite a slow news day, although we are expecting a speech from Tom Tugendhat this afternoon. Please do email me if you spot typos, errors or omissions – martin.belam@theguardian.com.