I want to tell you what is good, bad and truly beautiful with
the coalition government.
On the 7th of May 2010 I was focussed on the
fantastic result I got from the good people of Clacton and hadn’t even looked
at the bigger picture of the rest of Britain. On that day I got a call from the
BBC asking for me to talk about the possibility of the Conservatives forming a
coalition government (they wanted an angry right winger to decry the mention of
a coalition). However, I said how positive this could be allowing the fusion of
Conservative free market policy and liberal radicalism and reform. We both wanted
a Great Repeal Bill, localism by devolving power to town halls and a bonfire of
the QANGOs. The Lib Dems wanted a referendum on the EU and I thought this
matched with Tory ideals. The Liberals also wanted political reform and so did
the Conservatives. The coalition could have been a transformative government.
This is the case in some areas. Michael Gove has done well
with free schools giving parents and teachers choice and what is most amazing
is that the Liberal ministers agree with him. Ian Duncan Smith’s welfare reform
has showed people on benefits in the long term it’s in their interest to work.
For years we were known as the ‘nasty party’ for wanting to take benefits away
but now Labour are on the wrong side of the debate.
However, there have not been many good things. The QANGO
bonfire has gone out. Unelected officials have more control, QANGOs have more
power. Elected mayors and police commissioners, although a good idea, were
poorly implemented. Local councils have less autonomy with areas of their
budget ring fenced by central government. Local policy sounds good but in the
long term does us harm to councils as they will no longer want to lower taxes
and spend less. Political reform has not materialised with no power of recall
and open primaries. This is needed for safe seats with the example of 1 Labour
MP who has not held a surgery for over 40 years showing this well. Instead political
reform is bottom of the list with only a referendum on AV and House of Lords
reform, which was ridiculous.
But the really depressing thing is the economic policy. The
deficit is down but we are still accumulating debt. More debt will be accumulated
under this government than under 13 years of Gordon Brown, peaking possibly at
£1.5 trillion. On our watch government spending increased last year. This is ‘continuity
Brown’ with treasury officials following his policies. We continue to slosh
around cheap credit with quantatative easing creating no growth but inflation. Hollowed
out zombie banks suffer from welfare dependency. The government has not
addressed uncompetitiveness either despite them claiming we are the 15th
most competitive country in the world. But government spends more than 40% of
our GDP compared to Indonesia spending 15% and Brazil less than 20%. We need a
new approach with supply side reform, this will be unpopular but it must be
done. This government is very much like the 1970s. Then the Conservatives promised
reform but it never came.
Now I move onto the beautiful. This week something happened which
is game changing. The British get to choose over the EU. David Cameron is not
negotiating with the Foreign Office officials or himself as before but the British
people over our relationship with Europe. And we can say no to a renegotiated
EU, we can leave. It will take a lot to convince me to stay but it’s not
Douglas Carswell’s decision or David Cameron’s but the whole British people’s. This
policy shows the coalition can do the right thing in the national interest.
There are two things that are essential for the Conservatives
to win the General Election in 2015. Right wing European policy is vital to
stop UKIP gaining 15% in some of our marginal seats. We must win on the economy
too. The government is currently wrong as it is too willing to follow the
Whitehall consensus and Nick Clegg. We must not be conservative in reform and
achieve more with the free market and get rid of the oligarchy in government.
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