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Opinion

Without a paddle

06 Apr 2024 4 minute read
Photo by Birgit from Pixabay

Ben Wildsmith

As the Conservatives’ electoral prospects continue their journey towards Shit Creek, the Prime Minister’s ongoing hunt for a paddle is becoming yet more desperate.

The ‘Rwanda plan’ to deter illegal migration is the hill he has chosen to die on, and he’s too committed now to back out.

Much is made of the millions Sunak made in business. When he initially arrived in the national consciousness, it was at the height of Brexit insanity and the Johnsonian absurdities that followed.

Whilst fully complicit in all of that, it seemed to me that Sunak was a cautious, sensible presence in the maelstrom. Certainly, when he ran for the leadership, it was as a ‘details guy’.

His measured performances in those endless debates, including one in which he pretended to be friends with Andrew RT Davies, were in stark contrast to the wild-eyed demagoguery that won the day for Liz Truss.

So, after Truss’s experiment with think-tank lunacy saw the markets take away the national credit card, there seemed to be merit in turning to Sunak as a business-savvy operator who would steer a more sensible path.

Conservative politics 2024-style, however, have no truck with caution, tradition, or pragmatism.

If Sunak’s instincts were to steady the ship, those of his party were to use it as a battering ram.

Coerced

From the moment he was coerced to reappoint Suella Braverman to his cabinet, Sunak’s premiership was taken hostage.

Older readers will remember the Eurosceptic ‘bastards’ who derailed John Major’s government. It is not in the nature of people like that to be satisfied with victory, even one on the scale of Brexit.

Their recklessness and disregard for convention has, in their own minds, been vindicated by the referendum result and, as such, become the modus operandi for the party they now control. In short, if an idea doesn’t sound ‘disruptive’ then it can’t have merit.

It is from this mindset that the Rwanda plan originated. It’s worth noting that the idea is a logical fallacy.

We are told that Rwanda is a progressive nation with a thriving economy that respects human rights. At the same time, we are supposed to believe that the prospect of ending up there is so dire that refugees will stop coming to the UK altogether in fear of it.

I don’t know how Mr Sunak made his many millions but if his cognitive skills allow for that then one must suspect that luck had a hand to play.

There has always been the suspicion that the plan was never intended to be ‘operationalised’, to use Sunak-speak.

Rally support

The courts were bound to throw it out and Sunak would be able to rally support amongst ‘patriotic’ voters by feigning outrage at their interference in our ‘sovereignty’.

If gaslighting the nation in this way was his intent then he may, again, have underestimated the destructive impulses of his party.

Last night’s intimation that he would take the UK out of the European Court of Human Rights seems to be another step towards extremism and away from norms of safe governance.

With Braverman, Jenrick, and Badenoch all reportedly on manoeuvres to replace him, the Prime Minister is once again pandering to fools and knaves rather than asserting his authority over them.

Shameful

In the wreckage of UK politics that has followed Boris Johnson’s shameful tenure, Sunak’s weakness is becoming a threat to the nation. Ideas which began as publicity stunts are in danger of being actualised in an atmosphere of panic and end-of-term recklessness.

If the Prime Minister attempts to strip the UK citizenry of its legal rights in service of his own career it will mark a new low for a nation that has sunk to unimaginable depths already.

If we were to lose our recourse to law in a deregulated economy, we would be rendered serfs.  The court is the legacy of a United Kingdom that looked outwards and commanded respect around the world.

We have already lost our freedom of movement in a frenzy of xenophobic opportunism; we should become a pariah if our commitment to international law goes the same way.


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Dai Rob
Dai Rob
1 month ago

gRETA ARTICLE bEN! Fel arfer!!

Annibendod
Annibendod
1 month ago

On the money again Ben. If Sunak were to pull us out of the ECHR, we will be ever further down the Libertarian rabbit hole of Darwinian social theory. Starmer’s Labour have proven unwilling to take on the task of repairing the damage done by Brexit. What hope therefore, that a Starmer government would restore us to the ECHR in the event of our being wrenched out by Britain’s lunatic fringe? The imperative for deep constitutional reform and a wholsale change in direction wrt the economic model of Britain could not be more urgent. Yet I see Labour Party that… Read more »

Padi Phillips
Padi Phillips
1 month ago
Reply to  Annibendod

You and me both with Labour being blind to the rise of the right. They seem to be under the impression that they have the lead they have over the Tories because they have a better offer, but the reality is the lead is entirely down to how shockingly bad the Tories are. I’m hoping that the SNP will prevail in Scotland, giving Starmer something of a bloody nose, and, hoping beyond hope, that he’ll need the support of the SNP in order to form a government – however, the Tories have been so bad that it’s likely that Labour… Read more »

Annibendod
Annibendod
1 month ago
Reply to  Padi Phillips

That’s exactly what I’m aiming to do in Llanelli Padi. Town has stagnated with Labour leadership for decades. So I’m supporting Rhodri Davies for Plaid and will be active doing my best to help him get elected at the next GE.

Last edited 1 month ago by Annibendod
Ernie The Smallholder
Ernie The Smallholder
1 month ago
Reply to  Annibendod

Plaid Cymru must gain more support to win seats in South Wales where decades of labour rule has let them down and failed communities.

We need good decentralised governance that puts power (and wealth) into the local communities.

Annibendod
Annibendod
1 month ago

I think it was Padi who recommended the “Gary’s Economics” YouTube channel. I’ve since watched a great deal of it and can thoroughly recommend it. The growth of wealth inequality as applied to Wales with our cultural context goes a long way towards explaining the state of Wales today. It also informs us as to why having a Democratic Welsh State is a neccessary part of the bulwark we need to build to protect Welsh people from this out of control capitalist class that runs the UK and those from beyond these shores busy hoovering up our assets.

J9 1968
J9 1968
1 month ago

Are there any rivers in the UK not called s**t Creek?

Richard Davies
Richard Davies
1 month ago

Another great opinion piece from Ben.

The tories have this belief that the possibility of deportation to Rwanda will “stop the boats.” If someone is willing to risk their life crossing the channel the risk of deportation is minor in comparison!

Also, taking the uk out of ECHR will have serious implications for the Belfast (aka Good Friday) Agreement—a international treaty—as well as additional damage to the reputation of the uk.

Annibendod
Annibendod
1 month ago
Reply to  Richard Davies

I think it’s another step down the road towards a polarised society of rich and poor. We plebs will have no money, no assets and no rights. And I think we’re sleepwalking into it. Polarised on wedge issues and therefore distracted. We should all be fighting to reduce wealth inequality and build just societies.

Richard Davies
Richard Davies
1 month ago
Reply to  Annibendod

It’s the modus operandi of the tories; the NHS is struggling, there is a housing shortage, there is unemployment – blame the immigrant. In reality it isn’t down to immigration but deliberate failures to invest in this country for the benefit of all. As you say, we shouldn’t allow ourselves to be distracted, we should join forces and fight against those truly responsible!

adrian savill
adrian savill
1 month ago

ethyrgl da iawn

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