Article published on conservativehome.com:
The Conservative Democratic Organisation. Sensible
reformers – or rightist Bennites?
December 12, 2022 | Henry Hill |Tory Diary
Constitutional debates are difficult
things to conduct in the proper spirit, for a couple of reasons.
First, the stakes are almost always
high. You are, after all, talking about the very rules by which the game is
played. Opportunities to tilt the playing field abound.
Second, it can be very difficult to
maintain the proper differentiation between questions of means, the
proper stuff of a constitution, and questions of ends. Bloodless
discussions about the best mechanisms for collective decision-making and
governance can get short-circuited by more interesting debates about how to get
the specific outcomes you want.
As Zachary Spiro recently outlined
this is most obvious in Gordon Brown’s proposals for overhauling the United
Kingdom, which would simply bake Labour’s principles and policy objectives into
constitutional rights, with all sorts of woeful implications.
But the tendency is just as obvious
in the internal disputes of political parties. The Campaign for Labour Party
Democracy, an enthusiastic participant in the Opposition’s debilitating civil
war in the 1980s, made no secret that its various demands for changes to the
Party Constitution were entirely in aid of bringing the whole organisation
under left-wing control.
No doubt Peter Cruddas and Priti
Patel would resent their new outfit, the Conservative Democratic
Organisation, being compared to the Bennites of
yesteryear.
But whatever high-minded concerns
about the internal mechanisms of the party may have spurred them to action,
there hasn’t been any effort to hide the fact that it is also animated by a
distaste for the left of the Party (which apparently includes Rishi Sunak now)
in general, and enduring loyalty to Boris Johnson in particular.
There’s nothing wrong with being a
Hiroo Onoda in a good cause, if you think the former Prime Minister’s is such.
But such a spirit of the enterprise is unlikely to build the sort of broad
consensus needed to actually secure the changes the CDO is seeking, which would
require a two-thirds vote of the National Convention.
(I obviously write as someone who was
extremely critical of Cruddas’ effort to shoehorn Johnson onto the
leadership ballot. But it is worth the CDO remembering, before they cite the
toppling of Truss as evidence of the Party’s “contempt” for members, that our
survey suggests the grassroots thought she was right to resign – and
would have then backed Sunak.
This divisive stance is a shame,
because there is a strong case for overhauling the Party’s internal procedures.
John Strafford, the founder of the long-standing Campaign for Conservative
Democracy – the existence of which lends the CDO a slightly People’s Front of
Judea-ish edge – wrote on this site how the members’ vote for the leader was a
consolation prize after the grassroots surrendered meaningful control over the
organisation at large in the late 1990s.
There is plenty of scope for
disagreement on what those changes should be. William Atkinson suggested
letting members elect the Chair of the Board, which controls Party funds and
could ensure long-term investment in building the membership and developing
promising seats, rather than throwing everything at this cycle’s marginals. (Our
panellists weren’t keen.)
Cruddas instead wants them to elect the Party Chairman, who’s main role is setting election strategy. The utility of this is less obvious – the imperative of winning the next election dominates CCHQ’s thinking as it is, and members seem unlikely to ever elect a candidate who doesn’t make that their priority.
As for more local control over
candidate selections, it would certainly be good to see the end of CCHQ
imposing one-member shortlists or expecting a local association to select a
candidate they only just met.
But there would likely still need to
be some capacity for the centre to find space for candidates who are, for want
of a better term, government-minded; the accelerating tendency for hyper-local
candidates and MPs who act like councillors has not, so far, turned out to be a
recipe for effective use of public office at a national level.
We should also be wary of moves to
replace representative with direct democracy inside the Party. CDO’s proposal
to replace the national convention with a general meeting could easily end
up favouring the time-rich and highly engaged few over the general membership.
Finally, we should make sure that any changes are not conducted in the Bennite spirit. As I argued during the leadership contests, there are hard limits to the proper role of “party democracy” in a representative democracy.
A party exercising democratic control
over who it nominates for Parliament is all very well. But once elected
those people are representatives, not delegates. The idea that members should
be able to overrule Conservative MPs on the question on questions of confidence
in the prime minister, previously floated by some now involved in the CDO,
should be rejected in the strongest possible terms.
Alas, the CDO website lists amongst their aims “Retaining and
Reinforcing the Party Membership’s democratic right to choose the
Party Leader” (my emphasis, their capitals). For those who would defend MPs
proper independence in a parliamentary democracy, it may be time to do a little
reading.
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