Posted on 02/17/2005 8:01:51 AM PST by Pokey78
When George W. Bush arrives for his European visit next week, a special ceremony will be laid on in Brussels: the discreet burial of hatchets. Dinner with Jacques Chirac will start the rapprochement with Old Europe while other leaders wait in line, olive branch in hand. But theres one politician the American President certainly wont be meeting: Michael Howard. Even if the Conservative leader was at the European Union summit, hes unlikely to have been granted an audience; he languishes, unforgiven, in a special kind of purgatory.
Four months ago, before Bushs historic victory, Howard was parading his credentials as a man who would take on the Bush administration by attacking Blair over the war. If it displeases those in the White House, thats tough, he said. With those words, a nuclear winter descended over relations between the one-time Cold War allies. The Bush administration saw an ally in Blair; in Howard, it saw a turncoat. The President can forgive hostility, but never forgets disloyalty.
With a British general election expected in less than three months, it is a bad time to be losing friends especially those in a Republican party which last autumn assembled the most formidable conservative vote-winning machine in the free world.
Normally, Britain is the exception to the rule that the American president does not meet opposition leaders. Bush met Howard on his last state visit to Britain, just as he met Iain Duncan Smith and William Hague before him.
But David Frum, a former Bush speechwriter and author, says this masked a steady decline in Republican-Tory relations. The Tories are very difficult to read. Sometimes the Tories out-Atlanticise Labour and other times they flirt with Michael Moore-ism, he said. So Republican loyalties are split. Deciding who to back in a UK general election ought to be an easy decision for American conservatives, he says. The very fact that its not is a sad indictment of British Conservatives outlook since 11 September.
Tories who maintain their own Republican contacts are in no doubt about the scale of the crisis. Personal loyalty matters to President Bush above all other things, even party politics, says one senior Tory MP, well connected in Washington. Thats how he works, thats his foreign policy and it has served him well. So he takes loyalty very seriously. At the moment, Id say relations now between our two parties are at their lowest ebb since Suez. And by no means all Conservatives are distraught. Several Tory MPs spent last year admiring John F. Kerry as George Osborne, the Torys shadow treasury secretary, explained in this magazine a year ago. It pains me to report, he wrote, that we Bushites are a minority.
This rift, ironically, has opened at a time when British conservatism is at a new peak of influence in the White House. After revolutionising Americas foreign policy, the Bush administration is using 1980s Britain as a blueprint for a domestic revolution. The White Houses ownership society agenda is explicitly modelled on the Thatcher governments policies with council houses in the 1980s: use ownership to transform peoples lives and mindsets. The aim is to move from state-dependency to empowerment.
The White House wants to sprinkle this magic on US social security: allowing workers to control part of their personal pension investments, rather than have retirement funds managed by the state. Thatcherism has never been more fashionable. This was what allowed Liam Fox, co-chairman of the Conservative party, to secure a rare ticket to the White House two months ago: in his role as head of Atlantic Bridge, a group he set up to keep alive the Reagan-Thatcher spirit of co-operation. His trip has never been reported. The White House was anxious not to upset 10 Downing Street, and asked for discretion. Fox had, after all, come to ask the Bush election machine how he can learn from their victory to inflict maximum pain on Blair.
Terry Nelson, political director of the Bush-Cheney 04 campaign, met Foxs aides to discuss the progress of Voter Vault, the Tory computer modelled on the Republican partys system. It identifies target voters from databases used by direct mail firms.
Nelson, at least, is partisan. I would only help people I agree with politically, he said. So I was happy to give Liam the advice he needed. But Fox was even happier to meet his White House host: Karl Rove, chief political adviser to the President. Rove was still buzzing from the election victory five weeks earlier, and reeled off victory statistics to Foxs group. This is the conservative century, he told the Brits. The Presidents mission is to extend the frontiers of freedom at home as he had abroad.
To explain his ownership society, Rove then quoted extracts from a book, The Anatomy of Thatcherism by the late Shirley Robin Letwin, mother of the shadow chancellor. This obscure 1992 academic book is now at the heart of White House thinking on reform. The Thatcherite argues that being ones own master in the sense of owning ones own home or disposing of ones own property provides an incentive to think differently about the world, he read. The Thatcherite, whilst not believing that patterns of ownership absolutely determine peoples moral attitudes, nevertheless stresses that the two are connected, and sees in wider individual ownership a means of promoting moral attitudes Thatcherism seeks to cultivate.
What fascinates Rove is what Letwin calls vigorous virtues patterns of behaviour unleashed by the status of ownership. This idea, captured by Letwin and enacted by Thatcher, is what Rove believes will recast the domestic political debate in America.
This was not a show laid on for the Brits. In a recent speech to another Washington think-tank, Rove directed them to the same source. The closest analogy to what President Bush is attempting to do with his emphasis on an ownership society may be found in the policies of Margaret Thatcher, he said.
That British conservatism can be so popular in the White House while the British Conservatives are so unpopular shows how detached the two have become in the American mind. The Tories are no longer seen as guardians of the Thatcherite flame. The White House remains keen to welcome people like Mark Worthington, Baroness Thatchers private secretary, who was received in Washington in December. But the Conservative party is slipping off the Republican radar.
Were aware of British think-tanks like the Adam Smith Institute and the Institute of Economic Affairs, says Grover Norquist, an influential free-market activist in Washington. But todays Tory party, he says, makes far less impact. Britains general election will make half a days news in America: Its not as if hes going to lose to a left-wing party that will pull out of Iraq. And as long as Blair remains in power, he will shine so brightly in America that the Tories remain invisible.
In his dealings with Washington, Fox has reluctantly accepted that the White House will not hear a bad word against Blair. Instead, he has been seeking to impress on Rove that when Labours leadership changes, the White House may lose an ally. Blair is not typical of his partys views towards America, he told Rove during their meeting. This is the party of unilateral disarmament in the Cold War, several of whose leaders have been strongly and vocally anti-American. He then warned that Brussels may tie the hands of any successor to Blair. What should really alarm America is that if present trends toward European integration continue, as Blairs party wishes, Britain could no longer act independently as Americas loyal ally.
Duncan Smith commands formidable Washington links cultivated through organisations such as the Heritage Foundation. The former Tory leader is still received by Condoleezza Rice and Dick Cheney, and visited both last summer. Indeed, when Bush was first elected, Duncan Smith was the Presidents first friend in Britain. Blairs good, the President told him after he met Blair in Camp David. But I know hes not one of us. Bush is now convinced of exactly the opposite.
Fox is using Atlantic Bridge to keep up the lobbying. Its message is that every Republican interested in British links should survey the post-Blair options and realise they can always trust Tories, but no one else in Labour. Gordon Brown, Blairs most likely successor, certainly has American links but not ones likely to impress the White House. The Chancellor enjoys summers in Cape Cod and beach barbecues with Senator Ted Kennedy and the Democratic elite in Massachusetts. The Chancellors best friends in American politics are Bushs most despised enemies. To a President who often judges a man by the company he keeps, Brown will soon be in the box marked Democrat a unenviable status that is already starting to show.
The US Treasury, for example, is tiring of turning up to international conferences to be hijacked by what they see as gimmicks over African aid. The US has several times rejected Browns plan to create a new global Africa charity by securitising debt pledges. John Snow, the treasury secretary, did not turn up to the last G7 finance ministers meeting in London, blaming a bad chest cold. (The night before, he had been cheering the President at the State of the Union address.)
Bush does not share Blairs penchant for interfering in overseas elections, and is unlikely to endorse the Prime Minister knowing, almost certainly, that his support would be as helpful as Blairs backing a British trade union leadership election. But Norquist suspects the White House will cast its vote for Labour in other ways. The President will probably say that Tony Blair personally convinced him that the Middle East peace process is a central and important part of the war on terror, he says.
Statesmanship will be one of Labours strongest cards at election time: the Prime Minister will be able to contrast his clout in Washington with Howards non-existent stature on the world stage, even among his American brethren.
The repair work has started. Foxs message was listened to in silence by Rove, but is slowly finding a sympathetic audience among influential Republicans like Newt Gingrich, the former speaker of the House of Representatives. But the overall picture is bleak. Blair achieved few political dividends from the Iraq war, but he can say this: a White House smitten with Thatcherism is not talking to the Tories. And perhaps for the first time, a Republican president will be cheering on Labour on election day.
Fraser Nelson is political editor of the Scotsman and the Business.
"And perhaps for the first time, a Republican president will be cheering on Labour on election day.
Fraser Nelson is political editor of the Scotsman and the Business."
I for one, hope so.
nikos
Prior to Howard, the Tories were the most pro-American party available. Now that Howard is there, I will not be voting Conservative until he is removed.
My vote goes to the UKIP.
Regards, Ivan
Who or what is the UKIP?
Regards, Ivan
Thanks Ivan.
I just checked out their webpage. They have an interesting "manifesto," what would be called a "platform" in the U.S. Would you consider them to be centrist?
I am appalled at how terrible Michael Howard has been. He's simply not fit to be PM. And here he was one of the few minister in 1990 that supported Thatcher when the remnants of the "wets" and the old-guard Tories conspired to remove her as PM. Even the 'Rat party here in the USA isn't as pathetic as the Tories. What a mess.
They are about as close to my views as I can get at the moment; and I am to the right of Atilla the Hun.
Regards, Ivan
"The White Houses ownership society agenda is explicitly modelled on the Thatcher governments policies with council houses in the 1980s: use ownership to transform peoples lives and mindsets. The aim is to move from state-dependency to empowerment."
Oh, really?
Then how do we explain Bush's backing of the Kennedy education bill, the Daschle farm bill, the tax 'credit' giveaway to non-taxpayers, the prescription drug giveaway....
I remember very well what Ann Widdecombe, someone who worked for him, said - "He has something of the night about him". We discovered that, to our cost.
I did not support removing Iain Duncan Smith from his office. I did not believe it was necessary that William Hague left in the first place. I am becoming concerned that we will have to wait for a certain generation in the Tory Party to retire before we get any progress.
Regards, Ivan
Finally, turning to carbon dioxide emissions, whilst their effects on global warming remain unclear, the continuing use of fossil fuels undoubtedly impairs the long-term quality of life on our planet. We will therefore encourage and support private initiatives in developing energy production from renewable sources - biofuels, wave, wind, solar and hydrogen technologies, with the objective being that these sources should eventually provide for a substantial percentage of our energy consumption.
I support finding an alternative to oil for a different reason (I think global warming is bunkum) - I want to bankrupt Saudi Arabia and Iran, and have a good laugh at them when they try and throw rocks at our bombers coming in for the attack.
Regards, Ivan
I initially thought they were referring to John Howard, PM of Australia. Michael Howard, head of the British Conservative Party, has far from distinguished himself since taking over leadership. It's a pity the Conservatives can't seem to find someone to run the party who isn't unattractive, without a hope of unseating Labour, or who (like Mr. Howard) isn't a blatant political opportunist.
I actually agree with much of that statement about energy. Not a bad idea really. Something most Republicans would probably agree with. Although as Ivan said, more as a way of telling the Saudi's to go sod themselves..
There has been talk about William Hague making a comeback after this next election. If so, all the better.
Regards, Ivan
As an american, with extensive ties, knowledge and experience in Europe... If I were allowed to vote, i would certainly vote for UKIP. They are the only realistic party as of now in the UK. They see Brussels for what it is and how it is interfering in Londons affairs.
I hope the UKIP ends up with a strong showing. Perhaps that is what is needed to pull the Tories back to where they belong. What about this Fox, is he any good?
Hague would, I think, be an improvement over Howard for whom I had some hopes when he was voted leader. But having seen snippets of Hague over the years (including his famous pre-pubescent speech to the party congress) he seems to have a lot of the same traits that make the Conservatives seem (to us cowboy colonials) so aloof and upper classist (blech! really sorry to make up what sounds like a word Trotsky would have used).
Maggie Thatcher came across as what she was, the upwardly mobile and rapier sharp witted middle class daughter of a hard working grocer. I don't know who if anyone they've got with that same sort of charisma, but I think that's what will be needed. That is unless everything in the UK goes to Hell or Labour replaces Blair with a hard core lefty and veers back to crypto Stalinism. Then perhaps a pale, bald, white bread leader like Hague could stand a chance.
PS: I'm extremely follically challenged myself and am therefore free to comment on other people's topside skin exposure.
I believe Hague is actually middle class as well although he may not come across that way to everyone. I don't regard him as a toff.
If Labour replaces Blair with Alan Milburn, I suspect things will pretty much remain the same. He will have to defeat Gordon Brown, but Brown is paranoid and hostile, so that may not be as difficult as it sounds.
Regards, Ivan
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