Rebellion PM aiming to tough it out as fractious party heads for precipice
The Guardian|January 17, 2024
Rishi Sunak was the most junior of ministers when Theresa May faced her worst Brexit ructions, but as he battles Commons votes, endless amendments and mutinous Conservative factions, the prime minister might have some retrospective sympathy for his predecessor-but-two.
Peter Walker
Rebellion PM aiming to tough it out as fractious party heads for precipice

The parallels do not end there. With Brexit largely viewed as completed, Sunak's Rwanda deportation bill has become emblematic of what many Tory MPs see as the party's main ideological battleground: migration.

To extend the comparison one more time, much as May led a party that almost unanimously embraced departure from the EU, however reluctantly in some cases, virtually all Tories accept the basic premise of deporting asylum seekers to Rwanda, at least in public.

The Conservatives are thus, once again, mired in what a Freudianminded backbencher might term the political narcissism of small differences and at risk of implosion over amendments to the text of a bill or treaty that about 95% of the voting population would struggle to distinguish between.

However, while May faced a never-ending series of ministerial resignations, Sunak's internal discipline quandary has, thus far, been a bit more lower league: a pair of Conservative party deputy chairs, Lee Anderson and Brendan Clarke-Smith.

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