(Photo Manchester Evening News)
Last night’s dramatic news that Iain Duncan Smith had resigned
as the Work and Pensions Secretary continues to reverberate around British
politics. Duncan Smith has tried to spin his resignation as a matter of moral
principle, saying that he does not support the Budget proposal to cut £1.3 billion
from disabled people’s benefit payments.
This is rather curious, not only has Duncan Smith presided
over billions of pounds of welfare cuts, including to the disabled, over the
last six years, but also because the government had already signalled a
re-think of the Budget proposal, conscious that Tory MPs were set to rebel and
defeat the government in Parliament over the issue, if necessary.
Duncan Smith has said that after he was forced to defend the
policy, to see it jettisoned was the final straw, but that is just politics.
Duncan Smith has back tracked before, and this looks to be in the normal run of events of a
government with small governing majority.
I think there is much more to this. Duncan Smith is a well-known
Eurosceptic, and he has never really trusted the Prime Minister, David Cameron,
over his negotiations on European Union (EU) reforms. Duncan Smith has only
really been in the Cabinet because of the EU referendum, where Cameron judged
it better to have him government, rather than causing trouble outside of it.
If all goes to plan for the Prime Minister, and the country
votes to remain in the EU, I expect Duncan Smith would be sacked by the autumn at the latest.
By resigning now, Duncan Smith has signalled a challenge to Cameron’s
leadership and possibly stuck a fatal dagger into the back of the Chancellor, George
Osborne, who is Cameron’s preferred successor when he stands down at some stage
in this Parliament.
Certainly, there is no love lost between Osborne and Duncan
Smith, with Osborne reported in the past as saying that Duncan Smith ‘is just not
very clever’, and they have had constant battles over the welfare budget.
An interesting piece written by Kerry-Anne
Mendoza at The Canary, makes the point that this is indeed an attempt at a
coup by the Brexit wing of the Tory party, and that Boris Johnson is likely to
have been involved, or at least informed about it.
Boris Johnson’s decision to join the Brexit campaign has
virtually assured him of the leadership of the party once Cameron does go, but
the sooner Cameron goes the better for Johnson and the worst for Osborne,
although rumours abound that Osborne’s budget set us on course for a general
election (with him as leader, he hopes) in next couple of years. Osborne doesn't plan to make the same mistake as Gordon Brown when he succeeded Tony Blair as Labour Prime Minister, by failing to call a general election, to obtain a 'personal' mandate.
So Europe, once again, is tearing the Tory party apart. The
Eurosceptic wing of the party, roughly half of their MPs and probably three
quarters of the rank and file membership, could force a leadership election
after the EU referendum. Certainly, if we vote to leave there will be a
challenge, but it is looking increasingly likely, that there will be one even if
we remain.
All the pent up frustration of the Eurosceptics will need an
outlet if we stay in the EU, and Cameron is increasingly seen as a traitor, who
conned them with the offer of a referendum after renegotiations of our
membership terms. His negotiations are considered to be inconsequential, and
just a smoke screen to keep the Tory party united.
The next few months could finish off this government, and it
is notable that a YouGov opinion poll released yesterday, shows for the first time
under Corbyn’s leadership, Labour ahead in an opinion poll. It is only by one
point, and as we know opinion polls are not terribly reliable, but this does
compare to a steady Tory lead of around ten points since last year’s general
election.
The split in the Tory party can only get wider, and we may get
a chance to kick them out of government sooner than we had thought possible. It may be that Duncan
Smith’s resignation, is his most significant act as a political operator.
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