Come and join in the debate and discussion within the Conservative Party.
Have your say! Check out EVENTS
Come and join in the debate and discussion within the Conservative Party.
Have your say! Check out EVENTS
I set out below the Rules of the 1922 Committee for the Election of Leader together with a letter from the then Chairman of the 1922 Committee, Sir Michael Spicer. As far as I am aware the Rules have not been changed since I received his letter.
Can the Rules be changed?
The Constitution of the Conservative Party states:
Schedule 2
RULES FOR THE ELECTION OF THE LEADER
Election of Leader
3 Upon the initiation of an election for the Leader, it shall be the duty of the 1922 Committee to present to the Party, as soon as reasonably practicable, a choice of candidates for election as Leader. The rules for deciding the procedure by which the 1922 Committee selects candidates for submission for election shall be determined by the Executive Committee of the 1922 Committee after consultation of the Board.
Clearly the rules can be changed so how?
Clause 3 of the Rules states:
3 These rules are drawn up under the authority of the 1922 Committee, and any future changes which may be deemed necessary will be made by the 1922 Committee, as provided for in Schedule 2 of the Constitution of the Conservative Party.
So, as long as the Board is consulted the Executive of the 1922 Committee can change the Rules, e.g the Rules could be changed so that after a Leadership Election the "twelve months" as stated in clause 6 could be reduced to say "three months".
However there is one caveat to all this because under clause 17 of the Party Constitution it states:
17 The Board shall have power to do anything which in its opinion relates to the management and administration of the Party.
In other words, it can overturn whatever the Executive of the 1922 Committee decides. That would lead to a serious clash, particularly if the 1922 committee had the support of the voluntary party and they were making the Party more democratic and it could be seen that ordinary Party members were getting more power. In these circumstances the Party Board would be seen to be out of touch not only with the voluntary Party but also the Parliamentary Party. The whole legitimacy of the Party Board would come into question. e.g. why is the Party Chairman and a Deputy Chairman appointed by the Leader and not elected by the members of the Party and accountable to them? Is the Party Chairman just a spokesman for the Leader and not speaking in the interest of the whole party?
I am sure in this situation the Party Board would back down!
If the Executive of the 1922 Committee decide on a change to the Rules perhaps they might also consider puttin four candidates to the members of the Party and asking them to vote on a preferentialbasis with the first candidate getting over 50% of the vote becoming Leader. This would cut out a lot of the vested interest votes when MPs are choosing which candidate to support.
How democracy died!
Watch this video to see how CCHQ took control of the selection of parliamentary candidates.
How democracy died!
Watch this video to see how over the years democracy in the Tory Party has been eliminated and the consequent results.
Come and join us at the COPOV Forum and AGM on 9 April 2022. For further details see Events
Do join us at the COPOV Forum. Lots to talk about. For further information see Events
A Tsunami of Political Problems is Coming.
A
tsunami of political problems is surging towards the coast of the United Kingdom
and Boris Johnson is sitting on the beach watching it come towards us!
Caroline Strafford
sets out below some of the problems that need urgent action, in no particular
order:
1
Possibility of Russia invading Ukraine.
2
Possible sabotage of telecommunication
cables on sea-beds by Russia.
3
Over dominance of China in our trade.
4
Increase in taxes and National Insurance in
the spring.
5
Oil companies keeping their prices high
when world prices have dropped.
6
Over “greening” of our policies with huge
cost implications.
7
Banning conservatories.
8
Continued sewage spillage in our rivers.
9
Dangerous shrinking of our defence forces.
10
Sorting out the NHS from a bureaucratic
point of view as it has so many committees about which the general public know
nothing and patients still having difficulty
getting
face to face appointments.
11
Allowing the UK to have a sensible power
storage system and take gas from new field in North Sea and not be reliant on other countries.
12
Stop the use of motorway hard shoulders as
an extra lane.
13
Get all the civil servants back to work
in their offices.
14
Stop statues being pulled down because a
few don’t like them and ensuring the police take action.
15
Eliminate illegal immigration by all routes.
16
Position of the country post Brexit.
17
Impact of inflation.
18
Impact of increasing interest rates.
19
Reduction of National Debt.
20
Get the Northern Ireland protocol sorted
out.
'Absolutely disgusted': grassroots UK Conservatives turning against PM
Johnson
By Andrew
Macaskill
LONDON, Jan 14 (Reuters) - British Prime Minister Boris Johnson is
facing a revolt by grassroots Conservative supporters who want him to resign
after a series of revelations about parties held at his
official Downing Street residence during national coronavirus lockdowns.
From the West Midlands to Scotland, party members - who raise funds and
rally voters at election time - are turning against a man many of them had
admired for his exuberance, unstuffy if sometimes messy style and his
championing of Brexit.
John Strafford, 80, chairman of the Campaign for Conservative Democracy,
called Johnson the worst prime minister of his lifetime and said the
allegations about him attending parties during the worst health crisis in a
century showed him to be reckless and irresponsible.
"People are absolutely disgusted by it. It is a sign of the
arrogance of the man. The reality is that Boris is a court jester who wants to
be king," he told Reuters.
"His greatest failure is that he has no judgment, and judgment is
the most important quality for any politician."
Johnson was once the darling of the party's grassroots members who
helped secure him a landslide victory in a 2019 election, allowing him to
deliver on promises to finally steer Britain out of the European Union. They
also applauded last year's rapid rollout of COVID-19 vaccines under his
leadership.
'DEEPLY DISAPPOINTED'
But the relationship is rapidly souring under the impact of a steady
stream of revelations about Downing Street's apparent flouting of strict
lockdown rules.
In the latest twist, one guaranteed to upset Conservative supporters,
Johnson's office on Friday had to apologise to Queen Elizabeth after it emerged
that staff had partied in Downing Street on the eve of Prince Philip's funeral
last year, at a time when mixing indoors was banned. read more
Johnson himself was not present at those parties. However, he apologised
to parliament on Wednesday for joining a gathering in the Downing Street garden
on May 20, 2020, when Britain was under a strict lockdown.
While grassroots Conservative members cannot oust a leader, their views
influence lawmakers and they do vote on which of the final two candidates wins
the party's top job in a leadership election.
A senior government official, Sue Gray, is currently investigating the
claims about parties held in government buildings during the lockdowns. Her
report is expected in the next few weeks.
Johnson's supporters hope the report will stop short of saying whether
he knowingly broke any rules or should resign.
But Strafford said that regardless of the report's findings many rank-and-file
members had already made up their minds.
He said his group of Conservatives passed a symbolic vote of
no-confidence in Johnson last month - before the latest damaging revelations -
and his WhatsApp was inundated with messages from party members saying they no
longer support the prime minister.
"The only reason they are not resigning their membership is because
they want to vote in the leadership election, which is now inevitable,"
added Strafford.
Pressure among party loyalists is building nationwide.
In the Conservative stronghold of Sutton Coldfield in the West Midlands,
the local party association passed a motion on Thursday calling for Johnson to
stand down.
Scottish Conservatives have also broken ranks, with their leader Douglas
Ross publicly saying Johnson must resign.
Leadership and Parliamentary Candidate Selection
by
Mark Taha
"Re candidate selection- I believe in fixed term four yearly general elections at the beginning of May. All candidates to.be selected the previous January by one member one vote postal ballot with Alternative Vote, the shortlist consisting of anyone who can get a proposer and seconder from the local party members. Each member would be sent a ballot paper and another piece of paper with a maximum 100-word election address from each prospective candidate. Bye- election candidates to be selected in the same way as far as possible.
For the party leadership- annual election every July. 10% of MPs to nominate each candidate. Postal ballot of all members - if nobody gets over 50% a runoff among MPs between the top two. The leader nominates their deputy and makes all other appointments subject to confirmation by MPs. If the leadership falls vacant during the year, the deputy leader takes over."
Comment by John Strafford: Interesting proposal, although postal ballots are too expensive at a local level. The internet could be used instead.
At the COPOV Forum on 11th December attendance was 28 with representatives from nine Constituency Associations. The following votes were taken:
1) Should vaccinations for COVID19 be made compulsory?
Only one person was in favour.
2) Should vaccination passports be introduced and used for entry into different venues?.
The vote on this was 7 in favour and 11 against, others abstaining.
3) Should Boris Johnson resign as Prime Minister immediately?
A clear majority thought that he should resign now.
At the COPOV Forum meeting held on the 25th September the following motion was passed unanimously:
"COPOV believes that it is in the long term interests of the Conservative Party for the Party Board to relinquish its ultimate control of all decision making and for the Conservative Party to become an accountable, accessible, democratically elected organisation."