
British Conservatives since yesterday they have been looking for a way to repeat (probably online) the process of electing a new prime minister within eight days. If the deputies do not unanimously determine their next leader, they will nominate two candidates for the choice of party members. In fact, the British Conservatives have already succeeded in canceling both their caucus and their party base.
Party members, a very peculiar electorate (140,000 members, only 0.3% of the adult population, mostly men and unabashed Brexiteers), chose Liz Truss a month and a half ago. After the catastrophe caused by the actions of the former Prime Minister to supposedly restart the British economy, Tori they brought him Jeremy Hunt as finance minister.
So they overturned the party members’ verdict, but assigned Hunt to unofficially act as interim prime minister, a politician who came last and was deeply rooted in internal party elections with only 18 votes among 357 Conservative MPs. Meanwhile, the Tories also cut ties with their electorate.
Interest rates are rising outside the UK as well, but in London the Trust’s dovish policy will see borrowers paying an average of £5,500 a year more on their mortgages at the end of 2024. The damage is irreversible, and it matters who pays for it. If you own a house, you are more likely to vote Conservative. Destruction.
These days, there is a phrase on British social media addressing the British people three days before the 2015 election by the then prime minister. David Cameron: “Britain faces a simple and inevitable choice. Is stability and strong government with me or chaos with Ed Miliband?”
So it’s not just the Conservative Party that’s in crisis. Rather, the regression and existential crisis of the whole country has brought its strongest party into its current turmoil.
Under the next Tory leader, Britain will have five different (Conservative) prime ministers in six years (Cameron, May, Johnson, Thras and next or next). If there are not four left, since it turns out that about Could you wants to download again.
He recently described himself as a special-purpose rocket with the best Tory electoral record since Thatcher, the fastest vaccination program in Europe and, of course, Brexit. But in a recent poll, Britons seem to regret leaving at 60%.
So it’s not just the Conservative Party that’s in crisis. Rather, the regression and existential crisis of the whole country has brought its strongest party into its current turmoil.
And this, of course, is a vicious circle. The Tories themselves fell into the pit of populism, causing a deliberately chaotic exit from the European Union. Until the British collectively climb out of the hole they have fallen into, their prime ministers will change at the same rapid pace – Conservative or Labor – as even Labor on the cusp seems unwilling to contradict the popular verdict of the referendum.
* Mr. Timios Tsallas is a political scientist and journalist.
Source: Kathimerini

Anna White is a journalist at 247 News Reel, where she writes on world news and current events. She is known for her insightful analysis and compelling storytelling. Anna’s articles have been widely read and shared, earning her a reputation as a talented and respected journalist. She delivers in-depth and accurate understanding of the world’s most pressing issues.