The other Howard's 'forgotten majority'


British Tories see the problem of Leftist elitism but are too craven to offer alternatives to it -- like cracking down on illegal immigration and returning the police to fighting real crime instead of thought-crime

British Conservative leader Michael Howard yesterday launched the Tories' election manifesto with a promise to pursue the values of the 'forgotten majority'. Who they? 'Forgotten, neglected and taken for granted by this government. Is that how you feel at the start of 2005?' he asked. 'You're probably not part of the so-called liberal elite. You won't run our media or pressure groups. You're not a trade union boss, or the head of a quango', he added, namechecking a variety of public hate figures.

He has a point: most people feel alienated from government these days, even natural New Labour supporters. For example, when asked about their opposition to the Iraq war, many turned the question into one of whether they trust Tony Blair, rather than whether the war was right or wrong. Many feel a sense of exclusion from the operation of government - which increasingly consists of a set of personal cliques and networks, acting with diminishing reference to democratic institutions.

However, there is a limit to how much Howard, as the head of the erstwhile 'natural party of government', can succeed in playing along with today's anti-political mood. For starters, he is very much a part of the 'political establishment'; but worse, he has no alternative to New Labour. His 'forgotten majority' are hard-working, homeowning, pension-saving sort of people who don't want so many immigrants, favour law and order, and want a strong economy - just the kind of people New Labour spends all its time appealing to. The 'forgotten majority' are more of a stereotype than a reality, but they're far from forgotten.

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