An anecdote.
I'm supervising the thesis of a PhD student who has also been a Conservative councillor in a Somerset town for several years. He told me last week that he is not renewing his Party membership, not is he standing for re-election in May, because he claims that the Conservative Party has changed beyond recognition; it has abandoned 'one nation Toryism' in favour of aggressive and authoritarian English nationalism, and promoting divide-and-rule through 'culture wars' to retain the support of Brexitters in their hatred of "the liberal elite".
But he told me something else which I found really interesting. When he first stood for election and the local Party went out canvassing on doorsteps for support, they focused on shoring-up their support among residents living in the posh suburban 3-bedroom semi-detached houses, and were told not to waste time on the then Labour-supporting council estates. Now, he says, much of the Conservatives' support comes from those very same council estates - 'cos so many English working-class voters hate the EU, forriners and poncey liberals, and love cheeky-chappies like Johnson (and Farage) who they view as anti-Establishment and on the side of ordinary workers. Meanwhile, the once solidly Conservative suburbs have turned to the Lib Dems or Greens, appalled at how Right-wing and arrogant the Conservatives have become, and disgusted by its populist Mail-pleasing attacks on institutions that Conservatives used to defend and cherish; the civil service, Parliament, the BBC, the judiciary, universities, local government, etc.
Having gained the Red Wall, the Tories might be losing the Blue Wall.
I'm supervising the thesis of a PhD student who has also been a Conservative councillor in a Somerset town for several years. He told me last week that he is not renewing his Party membership, not is he standing for re-election in May, because he claims that the Conservative Party has changed beyond recognition; it has abandoned 'one nation Toryism' in favour of aggressive and authoritarian English nationalism, and promoting divide-and-rule through 'culture wars' to retain the support of Brexitters in their hatred of "the liberal elite".
But he told me something else which I found really interesting. When he first stood for election and the local Party went out canvassing on doorsteps for support, they focused on shoring-up their support among residents living in the posh suburban 3-bedroom semi-detached houses, and were told not to waste time on the then Labour-supporting council estates. Now, he says, much of the Conservatives' support comes from those very same council estates - 'cos so many English working-class voters hate the EU, forriners and poncey liberals, and love cheeky-chappies like Johnson (and Farage) who they view as anti-Establishment and on the side of ordinary workers. Meanwhile, the once solidly Conservative suburbs have turned to the Lib Dems or Greens, appalled at how Right-wing and arrogant the Conservatives have become, and disgusted by its populist Mail-pleasing attacks on institutions that Conservatives used to defend and cherish; the civil service, Parliament, the BBC, the judiciary, universities, local government, etc.
Having gained the Red Wall, the Tories might be losing the Blue Wall.