stowie
Active Member
Given you don't go in for scare tactics, I can only assume you are simply mistaken in that view.
I'm still surprised you believe it.
Dominic Raab - co-authored a piece advocating the privatisation of the NHS.
Steve Baker - Eurosceptic hardliner (was once on the fringe), now fighting for our freedom from the tyranny of ....errr... masks. And formed a climate "sceptic" group.
Priti Patel - leader of the hang 'em high brigade (but without the intellectual ability to form an argument for the position). Voraciously anti-migrant. Pushing through legislation to curtail right to protest, second-tiering UK nationals with joint nationality etc. etc.
Rees-Mogg - can be argued to have dallianced with far right, retweeting AfD and defending doing so by saying that it was important to understand this strand of German thinking, speaker at far right dinner engagement, meeting with Steve Bannon. He might be viewed with some amusement about his old fashioned ways but he strikes me as flirting dangerously close to some really unpleasant ideas.
These are the prominant Tories which I would say are hard right. There are many more now who are highly deregulatory in pretty much any government safeguarding, sceptical about climate change (sounds much better than denier doesn't it??), economically somewhere way past Milton Friedman, Ayan Rand cultists, but socially utterly regressive to the point of absurdity (Chris Chope anyone?)
The problem is this crapola of thinking is now normalised.
It is not the old One Nation Conservatism. It isn't even Thatcherism. The Tories have gone way past that with this government into straight up populism. And the problem with populism is that governments frequently need to do unpopular but necessary things.