For many in the Conservative Party, the National Conservative movement, which began in the United States, is another unwelcome faction in a divided party, with alarmingly fascistic overtones. To its supporters, it represents a rebirth of traditional conservative values after flirtations in recent decades with social liberalism, multiculturalism, diversity, equality and globalisation. Suffice to say it seems well-funded and, like the Conservative Democratic Organisation grouping within the Conservative Party, enjoys some popularity among the grassroots and rightist elements in the media.
What is National Conservatism?
In Britain it seems to be a kind of mash-up of Hard Brexit shibboleths, populism, nationalism, anti-globalisation, antiimmigrant prejudice, social conservatism and “anti-woke” beliefs, with a side-order of climate denialism, anti-vax crankery, Islamophobia, Sinophobia, transphobia, plus some optional mild racism and homophobia. They tend to like Boris Johnson, Donald Trump and Viktor Orban. As the Tory backbench MP Miriam Cates sees it, the UK arm of the movement grew out of the 2016 EU referendum and Boris Johnson’s 2019 election victory – “an instruction from the public that they expect us to govern with their interests, their values in mind. Not the values of the intelligentsia – the globalised elite whose loyalties are to everyone and no one”.
This story is from the May 16, 2023 edition of The Independent.
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This story is from the May 16, 2023 edition of The Independent.
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