Timothy Yeo's deselection: Is this the start of a Tory Spring?
The deselection of two Conservative MPs in the past week is leading some to suggest that grassroots members have had enough
By Tim Bale
6:30AM GMT 05 Feb 2014
Comments90 Comments
The result of the ballot of local members was decisive. After a long and bloody deselection battle with his constituency association, the sitting MP had to admit defeat. Tim Yeo, Suffolk South, February 2014? No. Nigel Nicholson, Bournemouth East, 45 years ago in February 1959.
Just over five years before Nicholson got the chop, the Conservative Party had decided to count its membership. The total was 2,805,032. Sixty years later, in 2013, the figure was only 134,000. Some will argue that those figures tell you all you need to know about the so‑called “Tory Spring” that has seen two MPs dumped by their local associations in under a week.
What do you expect, the argument runs, when the only people prepared to join the party these days are a bunch of swivel-eyed loons? No wonder that David Cameron has no more control over the grassroots than he does over the green benches. Welcome to the 21st-century Tory party, where deference has disappeared, ideological tests can be set and failed, and where there is no longer any such thing as a safe seat.
More:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/politics/conservative/10614852/Timothy-Yeos-deselection-Is-this-the-start-of-a-Tory-Spring.html
Taken from the comment section, Tory HQ take note:
michaelpm
• an hour ago
That word "modernising" should be inscribed on Cameron's tomb.
It sums up completely what has been nothing more than the most transparent, infantile, opportunistic, dishonest, self-serving PR exercise in British political history.
I never thought that I would see another politician as shallow and untrustworthy as Blair. But there he is, like some deluded Don Quixote, standing with his chest puffed out atop the pile of rubble that used to be the Conservative Party.
I've voted Conservative all my long life, but never again. UKIP may still struggle occasionally to acquire the PR gloss of the LibLabCon coalition, but as the only party that has a set of policies that is identifiably Conservative, I have no doubt where my cross is going from now on.
What an utter disaster Cameron and his cronies have been for the Tories. The abominable Yeo's departure, as welcome as it is, doesn't even begin to address the problem.