
The SDP failed to break the mould of British politics. Reform has a better chance
In that year, the then-famous Shirley Williams won a smashing by-election for the SDP at Crosby, a mere half an hour's drive from Runcorn, scene of today's Reform triumph. Although the SDP had a sort of afterlife, it died as a political force in 1988, merging with the Liberals.
Arguably, it failed even earlier: at the 1983 general election, it severely reduced the Labour vote but did not prevent a Conservative landslide for Margaret Thatcher. Both the main parties survived this onslaught of fanatical moderation. The SDP did not, in its own phrase, 'break the mould'.
Reform, though under different names, has had influence for far longer. Even in the 20th century, Nigel Farage began to be the key figure. In 2006, he became Ukip leader for the first time. In 2016, the threat which his party posed to the unity and electoral success of the Conservatives caused David Cameron, without nearly enough time spent in reconnaissance, to rush into – and lose – the momentous referendum on Britain's membership of the European Union.
The rise of Boris Johnson, and the electoral success of Boris's 'Get Brexit done ' general election of 2019, eclipsed what had now become the Brexit Party. Until galvanised by Rishi Sunak's sneaky snap election gamble in July 2024, Mr Farage appeared to have resigned himself to becoming a full-time media personality.
But then, seizing the moment, as he does so well, he swept back. His party (latest name, Reform UK) won five seats including his, and, more significantly, more than four million votes, making it the third-largest party in Britain.
And now this. Reform has seized (just) one of Labour's safest seats and some of the Tories' safest councils. Mr Farage has rightly intuited that, while it took the Conservatives 14 years to get themselves into a thorough mess, landslide Labour managed it in about 14 weeks. Today, the Tories suffered further, expected humiliation; Labour suffered new, perhaps unexpected, humiliation.
So the Farage-Reform effect is durable. Why?
Here again the comparison with the SDP may help. In its very conception, it was an elite movement. Its 'Gang of Four' that got it going consisted entirely of Labour former Cabinet ministers, three of whom – Roy Jenkins, Mrs Williams and David Owen – were household names. It emerged less from popular discontents than from the quarrels at the top of the Labour Party.
It also had tremendous backing from London-based media. We at this newspaper had the greatest fun at its expense but, for grand organisations like the BBC and the Financial Times, the SDP fulfilled their almost erotic fantasy of a 'compassionate' centrist pro-European party that also wouldn't tax important people like them to death.
The SDP caused less excitement down the pub (I should explain, for younger readers, that a 'pub' was a local bar where people, mostly men, mostly far from rich, could drink, smoke, laugh and complain. It was the mainstay of almost every community.) When the SDP died, it was not widely mourned, though it did help strengthen the Liberals. Its history was a useful cautionary tale to a young man called Tony Blair. He worked out how to bring quite similar policies to Labour without splitting the party.
Reform, by contrast, had no encouragement whatever from the mighty. I remember being ticked off by Douglas Hurd, who was then the foreign secretary, for the simple act of publishing, in the Sunday Telegraph in 1995 or so, a comment piece by the then leader of Ukip. If Ukip appeared on the BBC at all, it was only to be roasted for some obscure council candidate who had been caught making off-colour remarks about a sacred subject, such as immigration or LGBT rights.
The Farage vehicle, under its various names, mostly had to make its own way in the world. It therefore has an air of authenticity about it. It is the political equivalent of the self-made man – a bit cocky, perhaps, a bit insensitive sometimes, but a life force, something to be reckoned with.
The two main parties do not feel like that at all, even though Kemi Badenoch's rise as the first African to become a British party leader is quite a story.
Both sense they have not got anything much right for a long time. The Labour Party lost authority in Iraq and when the economic good times came to an end during the financial crisis of 2008-9. The Conservatives lost it over Covid and the accompanying disarray.
Both lost it over Brexit, not so much, perhaps, because they supported Remain (a respectable, though mistaken, cause), as because they managed to lose. Over net zero, both have deployed moralism to override legitimate fears of cost and impracticality, so both are no longer believed. Over immigration, both advocate control but produce chaos.
Our prosperity, security and liberty all feel shakier than they did a quarter of a century ago.
And since the Chancellor, Rachel Reeves, lashed her economic policy to figures about government borrowing which are largely beyond her power to hit, the whole Starmer government is in a state of frantic inaction.
I did not have a vote in Thursday's local elections (my county's choice is postponed by a year because of this funny business with mayors), nor am I a citizen of Runcorn or Helsby. But if I had been able to vote, I can well imagine choosing Reform, not because I would have had any particular belief that the party will get things right, but because I could find no other appropriate gesture to indicate that things are wrong.
It might seem to follow from what I have said above that I am arguing that Reform should take over from the Tories or even from Labour (quite a lot of its policies are becoming socialist). Actually, I am not.
Our two-party system has some disadvantages, but it has at least two virtues. The first is that it prevents the main parties from being captured by one sect. They must be informal coalitions to win. This is good training for future ministers.
The second is that when they win with a good working majority, they have the possibility of bringing about real change. That was true for Attlee in 1945, Mrs Thatcher in 1979 and Blair in 1997.
The same ought to be true for Sir Keir Starmer, with Labour's overall majority at the last election – 174, now reduced following Runcorn and other embarrassments, to 156 – still unassailable. But this time, very unusually, the disproportion between votes cast (33.7 per cent for Labour) and seats won is so great as to be unsettling. Labour is the uncomfortable beneficiary of an arithmetical freak: only 20 per cent of those entitled to vote supported it last July.
The chances must be that, next time, the seats will be more proportionate to the votes for the main parties. If so, normal rules will apply once more and Reform will find it hard to break through. The Tories will have used their time to rethink and, just possibly, Labour will have done the right things, all else having failed.
We still cannot possibly say that Reform is fit to govern. I must admit that I doubt it. But what can now be said is that Reform has shifted the burden of proof: the two main parties always argue for their competence. On what evidence?
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The Independent
13 minutes ago
- The Independent
This hollowing out of politics could see the death of the centre
Voting in the Green Party leadership election opened on Friday, with the result to be declared on 2 September. The contest between Ellie Chowns and Adrian Ramsay, running on a joint ticket, and Zack Polanski has focused to an unusual extent on electoral tactics and the hopes of winning a large number of Commons seats from Labour. Meanwhile, the Corbyn-Sultana party is still taxiing towards the runway for take-off, its passengers talking excitedly about replacing Labour as the main party of the left, either on its own or in alliance with the Greens. There are plenty of reasons for being sceptical of both parties' ambitions, which I will come to in a moment. But there is also a real possibility that Labour support will collapse. I wrote last week about Keir Starmer's 'Macron strategy', by which he presents himself as the alternative to Nigel Farage as prime minister. Thus he would seek to rally disaffected Labour voters tempted to stay at home or defect to other parties, plus Greens, Corbynites, Liberal Democrats and soft Conservatives, by presenting them with a binary choice. But what if that isn't the choice by the time of the next election? What if, just as Reform has overtaken the Tories in the opinion polls, a Green-Corbynite combination overtakes Labour? Peter Kellner, the polling guru, has commissioned research from YouGov into party loyalty. He says the figures 'should terrify both Labour and the Conservatives'. He found that people who intend to vote Reform and Green are much more likely to give a positive reason for their support, such as 'it has the best policy on the issue I feel most strongly about', whereas Labour and Tory voters are more likely to give a negative reason, such as 'it isn't great but it's better than the alternatives'. He concludes: 'The two pillars of the old Labour-Conservative duopoly, family influence and social class, have crumbled, and nothing has replaced them. Stalled living standards add to their plight.' Every day provides more evidence of the gap between the old duopoly and the new parties in enthusiasm and commitment. The trickle of former Tory MPs defecting to Reform could become a flood if Farage, who caught the Ming vase that Starmer dropped, can carry it over the slippery floor for another couple of years. Defections to the Corbyn-Sultana party are not on quite the same scale yet. Six former Labour councillors in Hastings and one Labour councillor in Coventry said on Friday that they will join the new party. But more will follow if the party can gain credibility. As I said, there are reasons to doubt that this will happen. The party's launch has been chaotic. The temporary name, Your Party, does not work at all. Any discussion of the party begins in confusion. 'Your Party…' 'It's not my party…' The 600,000 sign-ups expressing interest make up a relatively small number compared to, say, the six million who signed the 2019 petition to revoke Article 50 and stay in the EU. There are doubts about the wisdom of re-running Jeremy Corbyn's Labour leadership campaign outside the Labour Party. James Matthewson, who was a Labour spokesperson under Corbyn, wrote for the i paper on Friday: 'My warning to the left, especially those young lefties who are still unjaded and have the energy we need to change the world, is: don't be lured into another vanity project.' He thought the idea of Zarah Sultana as a fresh face that would mean a fresh approach was 'far from the truth'. As for the Greens, there is an air of unreality that hangs over the leadership election debate, which has become bitter and personal, at least between Ramsay and Polanski. (Ramsay refused to say he 'liked' Polanski in a radio debate between the two.) Ramsay and Chowns claim to be focused on electoral success, having delivered the quadrupling of seats from one to four last year, while Polanski claims to be more ambitious, calling his approach eco-populism and being willing to do pre-election deals with the Corbyn-Sultana outfit. It may be that climate change – 'the issue I feel most strongly about' – and idealistic disillusionment with a Labour Party governing in bleak times will be enough to break through, but the red-green alliance has nothing yet to match the power of the issue of immigration combined with the charisma of Farage. Of course, Reform's success may not last. Farage may drop the Ming vase. He was forced today to deny speculation about his health, telling The Times that his Tory and Labour rivals were 'spreading these rumours' because 'it's the last card they've got'. But the untrue rumours nevertheless draw attention to the extent to which Reform's advance depends on a single individual. It may be, even if Farage is the leader of the real opposition by the time of the next election, that Starmer's Macron strategy will work. Or it could be, if the Labour vote does collapse, that the Lib Dems prove to be the saviours of pragmatic moderation. Ed Davey's inoffensive army, rather than the Green Corbynites, could fill more of the gap left by Labour's retreat. But I think a Labour collapse is an underestimated possibility.

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2 hours ago
- South Wales Argus
Aberthaw Power Station £5m settlement 'blindsided' cllrs
The £5.25m sum was paid to a company that brought a legal challenge to how the Cardiff Captial Region, which is made up of 10 councils in South East Wales including those in Gwent, awarded a contract for the demolition of a former power station. Earlier this year a High Court judge declared the contract to demolish Aberthaw Power Station for the Cardiff Capital Region was awarded unlawfully but the size of the settlement was only revealed in June and a councillor said he only learnt about it from news reports. Councillors who sit on the region's overview and scrutiny committee. who met this week, complained they hadn't been fully informed of the proceedings, and accepted they had failed to properly scrutinise the region's leadership and its executive. Armand Watts, a Labour councillor from Monmouthshire council, told the meeting: 'There's nothing worse as councillors than the feeling of being blindsided. That is how we felt. The first I properly understood this was reading about it in the newspapers.' Cllr Watts said it was 'embarrassing' for himself and Monmouthshire's Conservative representative on the committee, Cllr Jan Butler. He said: 'People were saying what's going on? And we didn't know as we hadn't discussed it.' He added: 'We should fear our electorate, they are reading headlines in newspapers and asking how did it ever get to this point?' Susan Lloyd-Selby, a Labour councillor for the Vale of Glamorgan which includes Aberthaw, said she wanted to know more about the independent review the region has commissioned and said there are also local concerns around the ongoing demolition work which she said were causing 'reputational issues' for the body. Cardiff Labour councillor Peter Wong said he'd been unhappy from the start with how the region had handled the £38m purchase of the former coal fired power station, in 2022. It intends developing the site as a renewable energy park and is doing so through Cardiff Capital Region Energy a limited company in which the Cardiff Capital Region is the only shareholder. Cllr Wong said: 'At the very first meeting at Aberthaw I asked can we see the business case and was told no, not even in confidence. That didn't help the level of transparency. 'I'm not saying that wouldn't have led to the issues at Aberthaw but that lack of transparency doesn't help. I genuinely think there needs to be more transparency and more effective scrutiny than we've currently been doing.' Later in the meeting Cllr Wong criticised the draft annual report of the South East Wales Corporate Joint Committee, which is the formal name for the capital region as one of four joint committees established across Wales. He compared it to the highly controlled decision making of the former Soviet Union and said: 'I don't think the report in front of us reflects what happened. It feels very much politburo stuff.' During the meeting Monmouthshire County Council's Labour leader, Mary Ann Brocklesby, who is the chair of the capital region said the 'procurement issue around Aberthaw' was 'without question' the body's 'low point' of the year. Chief executive Kellie Beirne said the independent review is being conducted by accountancy firm Deloitte and is about 'half way through' and is expected to be delivered in the early autumn. Ms Beirne also stated she isn't a board member of Cardiff Capital Region Energy and also reminded members the legal proceedings were against Cardiff council and said the region is bound by a confidentiality agreement. It has previously said the £5.25m settlement has been funded from commercial returns on interest generated on balances it holds, and there was no requirement for further public funding.


Times
2 hours ago
- Times
Nigel Farage: They claim I'm ill — the truth is they're running scared
The rumours began to spread through Westminster a few weeks ago, on both sides of the political divide. Labour and Tory MPs began to gossip openly about Nigel Farage's health, suggesting that the 61-year-old's relentless schedule was taking its toll. The Reform UK leader is happy to set the record straight: the rumours are untrue. 'I think the fact they are spreading these rumours — which they are — is because it's the last card they've got,' he said. 'They can't question us on immigration. They can't question us on crime. They have nothing to go on.' Farage's carefully cultivated public image of the smoking, pint-swilling raconteur is rooted in reality. He still enjoys a drink and the occasional lunch that can drift on for hours into the afternoon. But he is changing with age. The long days — rising at 4.50am, going to bed at 11pm — are exhausting and the Reform UK leader says he has moderated his lifestyle to suit. 'I don't think I've ever worked under more intensity than I have for the last year,' he said. 'It's an enormous task, building a new political party and movement. I'm trying to moderate with age. 'I wouldn't say the BMA would hold me up as a pin-up boy, but I'm feeling good. A bit of exercise, I walk the dogs. Yesterday I had lunch with a very interesting chap. We got through lunch with just one bottle. I'm not too bad at all really. I look at people I was at school with and think I'm doing well.' Not sweating the small stuff Farage says the biggest change to his lifestyle is that he is now more zen. 'I just don't let little things worry me. I don't let online criticism worry me. Nothing really gets to me at all any more.' Farage is more serious than he has ever been. With Reform UK riding high in the polls — they have held their lead since April and their support shows no signs of ebbing — he believes that he has a genuine shot at becoming prime minister. 'This is it,' he said. 'It's the last shot for me. I actually think in the view of an increasing number of people it's the last shot for the country.' That Farage's health has become a source of discussion in Westminster is perhaps unsurprising. With Farage at the helm, Reform UK is a genuine threat to the established political order. Without him, his critics believe, his nascent party would collapse. He is, they say, a one-man band. Farage appears to be acutely aware that he is potentially a single point of failure. He is trying to promote those around him, particularly Zia Yusuf, who has emerged as one of the party's main spokesmen. His aim is to ensure that Reform UK is not synonymous with his personal brand but recognised in its own right. 'I'm very keen to promote others,' he said. 'I don't want the crime campaign just to be me. It's about the brand Reform itself, standing on its own two feet. We are getting there. People say to me in the street now, 'I think I'm a Reformer'.' The real opposition His rivals begrudgingly praise his communication skills. His campaigning on Brexit and his insatiable appetite for public appearances have made him a household name. He is a friend of President Trump, and when JD Vance comes to the Cotswolds this month for a family holiday Farage will be one of the few British politicians he sees. His profile easily eclipses that of Kemi Badenoch, the Conservative leader. A YouGov poll for The Times found that 64 per cent of voters had a clear idea of what he stands for, compared with 30 per cent for Badenoch and 26 per cent for Sir Keir Starmer. On the question of who was providing the more effective opposition, Reform or the Tories, the response was overwhelming: 42 per cent said it is Farage's party, compared with 9 per cent who said the Conservatives. Nearly half of those who voted Tory at the last election said Farage was doing a better job at opposing Starmer. The polling is so clear that Starmer has decided that he had no choice but to treat Farage as the real leader of the opposition. This may be in part political opportunism — Reform UK's rise damages the Tories more than Labour — but senior figures in Labour are increasingly concerned about the strategy and that by calling Farage out at every turn Starmer risks alienating his base and creating a monster that will ultimately consume him. Farage's new work ethic borders on Stakhanovite. He is planning to take four days off over the summer — he wants to go fishing with his son — but spends most of his time hammering home his new message on law and order. Britain, he argues at his now weekly press conferences, is broken. There is a steady drumbeat of announcements — sending violent offenders to El Salvador, halving crime within five years, building nightingale prisons on army bases, scrapping the online safety act — along with a string of public endorsements. Farage's aim is to at once broaden Reform UK's message while also drawing a direct link between migration and crime. He is said to be building up to an announcement on deporting illegal immigrants. Those involved say it is a substantive piece of work; there is talk of a 100-page policy document detailing how Reform UK would take Britain out of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). A draft bill is being drawn up with emergency powers to allow the detention and deportation of people arriving in Britain on small boats. Although Farage insists that the Tories are irrelevant, the approach appears to be aimed in part at outflanking them. Badenoch is expected to use her conference speech to confirm plans to leave the ECHR to tackle small boat crossings. Farage intends to get there first by going faster and harder. Preparing for power The expected strapline for Reform's conference will be Next Steps as Farage seeks to embed in the minds of voters the idea that it is preparing for power. The party has sought to professionalise its operation, using an influx of money from new members to move to a bigger office in Millbank tower. The office comes equipped with a live studio space, which Farage can use to film ad hoc videos to respond to fast-moving events. The intention is to make Reform UK more agile and responsive. Reform saw Trump's visit to Scotland this week as proof of the tectonic shift in British politics. The highlight from Trump's extraordinary 70-minute press conference with a largely silent Starmer was when the president was asked what his advice to Farage and Starmer would be before the election. 'You know, politics is pretty simple,' Trump said. 'I assume there's a thing going on between you and Nigel, and it's OK. It's two parties. But generally speaking, the one who cuts taxes the most, the one who gives you the lowest energy prices, the best kind of energy, the one that keeps you out of wars … a few basics.' The headlines were, inevitably, about the fact that the president had offered Starmer unsolicited advice that he needed to cut taxes and stop the boats. But of arguably far greater significance was Trump's acceptance of the premise of the question: that the next election would be a battle between Starmer and Farage. Badenoch and the Tories were not even part of the conversation. The Tory leader did not have a meeting with Trump at his Turnberry golf course but is expected to meet him during his state visit. But the challenge for Badenoch is that Labour and Reform are both intent on squeezing the Tories out of the picture. Sticking to the script Labour is drawing up plans for its conference, and Reform is likely to feature heavily. Starmer will reprise his message on the need for growth at all costs — necessarily so, given the anaemic state of the economy and the scale of tax rises expected in the autumn budget. But Farage and Reform are likely to be a constant theme as Labour hones its attacks. Those attacks are still largely based on three fronts: accusing Farage of trying to sell out the NHS, being a Putin stooge and promulgating fantasy economics with unfunded pledges. Senior figures in government admit there is little evidence that the attacks are working, but argue that this is not the point. Labour believes that the messages it is embedding in the minds of voters now will come to the fore when the general election comes into view — when the prospect of Farage entering No 10 becomes a reality. But what if they don't? After all, Rishi Sunak repeatedly said that voters would change their minds about him and the Conservatives during the white heat of the election campaign. The election result was even worse for him than had been expected. The murmurings of discontent are growing louder. One senior Labour source said that 'you can't out-Reform Reform' by going tough on issues such as immigration — it doesn't wash with voters. The other fear is that giving Farage a platform and painting the idea that he could become prime minister risks becoming a self-fulfilling prophecy — that he might just do it.