Chippy_boy
Well-Known Member
Blair was to the right of some Tory leaders let alone Labour ones, particularly late-period Heath.
But I'll make the point again that "centrist" in the Thatcher/Blair era meant a less extreme version of the right-wing, free-market philosophy that Thatcher introduced. In other words, the concept of 'the market' was accepted as part of the consensus but Blair tempered it with an element of social justice. But there's no centre in the scenario we have now. It's either-or. Public services have been cut to the bone with more to come. What is the "centre position" in this situation?
The only alternative is to reverse it, not temper it a bit.
Cutting public services to thread-bare levels is not a fundamental tennet of Conservative policy though. It's simply that Conservatives believe fiscal prudence. I do accept that there is some ideological divide, with Labour favouring a larger public sector and the Conservatives a smaller one. But I do not accept that it is fundamental to Conservatives to have our public services on their knees: it isn't.
I'd like excellent public services for all, and every Tory I know wants the same. Your criticism simply ignores the economic climate we've had to operate in (and indeed that which Margaret Thatcher inherited in 1979).
A huge failing of the Tory campaigns of late have been a failure to explain to the public WHY austerity was needed, and what the vision is for once austerity is over. If people were offered a bright future, they might be more accepting of the pain on the road to get there. And we are nearly there; the deficit already down to more manageable levels. May completely lost the plot in so many ways, but forgetting to mention this at all, was one of the biggest sins.