rhino phil wrote:
if they swing further to the right (hard to believe!) they will be even more unelecteable and hopefully nowhere near office for another decade or two.
It's interesting how party activists are out of touch with the electorate.
After the Tories have had a setback this week, the calls from the party are that the electorate has 'punished them for not being Conservative enough' and that the solution should be moving to the right, focusing more on being against Europe and immigration. This is exactly what happened when they looked for lessons from the 1997 defeat when Blair hammered them, they went into a right wing posturing rump under Hague, Duncan Smith and then Howard, campaigning about Europe and immigration, remember all those "are you thinking what we're thinking?" posters they had which featured some stereotypical right wing message. They were smashed at three successive elections. Cameron then brought them more towards the centre and made them electable (up to the point of being a minority government) and now their activists are lobbying to try and go back to the right wing wasteland again!
I suppose there has been a similar effect in Labour in the past, when they go into times of struggle the call from the party is that it should rediscover socialism, stand for renationalisation, restoration of trade union powers etc. Again that sort of thing cheers the party members but just pushes Labour away from the electorate.
The smart leaders are the ones that bring their party as close as possible to where the British electorate is. Cameron for his faults has done that better than other Conservative leaders since the early days of Major. Blair was the best at that by far. David Miliband would I believe also have done that and if he was Labour leader now I think we would be looking at a no-contest march to victory between now and 2015 similar to Blair from 94-97.