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Cameron's New Conservative Party
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Pebble



Joined: 12 Nov 2005
Posts: 1143

Posted: Mon Jan 30, 2006 2:35 pm    Post subject: Cameron's New Conservative Party  

Quote:
Cameron denies 'betraying' Tories
Conservative leader David Cameron
Mr Cameron's speech was scathing of Gordon Brown
David Cameron has denied betraying Conservative principles with the changes he is making to the party.

He said in a speech to the left-wing think-tank Demos that Tories had won "the battle of ideas" and were not facing the challenges of the 1970s.

Tony Blair had known what people wanted in the 1990s, he said, but New Labour's aims were not "markedly" different to Margaret Thatcher's and John Major's.

However, New Labour had failed to deliver on its promises, he said.

'Thatcher legacy'

Mr Cameron said Conservatives should focus on a vibrant economy, decent society but also have "happiness, quality of life and environmental sustainability as central goals".

He blamed Chancellor Gordon Brown - widely seen as Mr Blair's likely successor - for increasing bureaucracy.


We made some terrible strategic and tactical mistakes
David Cameron

But Mr Cameron praised Mr Blair, saying the prime minister saw his task as "preserving the fruits of the Thatcher revolution".

Mr Blair's triumph had been to focus on social justice and economic efficiency, but Labour had failed because it had introduced "legislation, regulation and bureaucracy".

"Wherever they have seen a problem, they have seen action by the state as the solution," he said, adding that it was the "natural instinct" of Mr Brown.

The issues Mr Blair focused on - a stronger economy and more decent society - were now the "common ground of British politics".

"His aims were not markedly different to Mrs Thatcher's aims, or John Major's aims, but they were new for Labour. The new bit of New Labour was the equivalence granted to economic efficiency," said Mr Cameron.

"The principal task for us is now clear," he said.

"We have to find the means of succeeding where the government has failed."

'Morass'

Mr Cameron argued that Labour's move towards what had traditionally been Tory ground had devastated the Conservatives.

"There was in truth nothing fundamentally new about the New Labour analysis except that the party offering it was Labour."

He said: "We made some terrible strategic and tactical mistakes."

This involved focusing too much on areas where the parties did still differ - tax, immigration and Europe - despite successive leaders recognising the need to avoid being seen to be extreme, he said.

"Embracing a 'new politics' and accepting that in many areas New Labour was closer to the Conservative Party was a difficult thing to do. But nevertheless it was the right thing to do.

However, former Conservative Party chairman Lord Tebbit warned against moving towards the "morass" of the political centre ground.

He told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: "If all the parties mill around in the centre ground and the elector feels that it doesn't matter which one he votes for, it will not make a lot of difference. He will probably stay at home."


http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/4661024.stm


And you thought your Tory party had hit its lowest ebb 'Greaves :lol:

He's talking Thatcher but at the same time moving to the centre right spot along with Labour. Sheer genius. :lol:
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