Did you put the date in your diary? Have you cleared out your schedule? Perhaps bought some fancy little outfit to celebrate the occasion? Because Liz Truss and the PopCon attention seekers are here.
Sounds like a band, right? Well that is the premise behind it, to start a movement powerful enough to influence the Tory Party So dead politicians can stay relevant.
The wait has been tantalising but finally – finally! – it is upon us. A handful of Conservative MPs are launching a new grouping, because they believe that they know better than everyone else. I know, I know, and Groundhog Day was only last week.
So what is the PopCon?
Popular Conservatives – PopCons for short – is co-headed by Liz Truss which, to be fair to her, is funnier than anything any political satirists have come up with for some time now. Who wouldn’t have enjoyed an NHS safety pressure group headed by Harold Shipman?
Pop Cons are gathering tomorrow in central London and they will – again, you may find this hard to believe – argue in favour of tax cuts and harsher rules on immigration. Where had they been all this time? For so long, Britain had been clamouring for right-wing politicians making the case for tax cuts and harsher rules on immigration. Finally, they are delivering.
Who are the PopCon and who is leading them?
Who is “they”, aside from our esteemed former Prime Minister? Well there is Jacob Rees-Mogg, of course, and he is due to be joined by Lee Anderson, the former deputy chairman of the Conservative party, who resigned in order to vote against the Rwanda plan then did not vote against the Rwanda plan. Oh, and Nigel Farage may be making an appearance. Really, they’re sending their best.
It is, of course, both easy and fun to point and laugh at them, but it is worth wondering if something more structural may be going on here. There are now approximately seven thousand groupings of right-wing Tory MPs – New Conservatives, European Research Group, Common Sense Group, please god don’t make me list them all – and most of them are fairly new. What’s happening?
One explanation could be that those MPs looked at peacocks and saw something worth emulating. The right-wing of the party cannot win on numbers alone, but it can try and make itself look bigger and more important than it actually is. One way of doing it is to launch endless different factions, even though most of them have very similar membership lists.
Another is perhaps more rogue, but worth exploring: is it possible that they just love the attention? I am asking this in surprisingly good faith, and as someone who has been in the Westminster trenches since the general election of 2015.
Because of the Brexit forever wars and the never ending Conservative psychodrama, every MP who wanted a place in the spotlight between 2016 and 2020 managed to get it. Votes were often tight in the House of Commons, and leaderships were rarely safe. In this context, every politician mattered; every backbencher could decide to become prominent, and every grouping, no matter how small, had to be taken seriously.
This was a new development for an entire generation of British MPs. Many of them had spent years, sometimes decades, toiling away in relative obscurity, but suddenly what they did and said was of interest to the media. They had influence! They were listened to! How can that not have left a mark?
The only problem, really, was that it was never going to last. Rishi Sunak isn’t exactly thrilling but he has, for the most part, brought Westminster back to normal. He isn’t May or Johnson or Truss – merely a Conservative Prime Minister doing his best to govern, with a large majority.
What it means in practice is that the opinions of half-dozens of MPs shouldn’t really matter anymore. They are not able to head up rebellions large enough to topple the Prime Minister, or even make him lose votes in the Commons. They don’t matter anymore! But you know, you try and tell them that.
Who is funding the PopCon group?
The PopCon group is being funded by Right-wing LObby’s, Fixated on keeping the Tory party in check. After the failure of Braverman to hold Sunak in check on issues like Rwanda, the Right-wing Tories and funders realised they need more than one influential person within the party to sway decisions in their favour.
Because they got used to the taste of power, the right flank of the Tories are doing whatever they can to remain relevant. TV channels like GB News and TalkTV are helping keep their delusions alive, but they aren’t enough. What they crave is widespread media attention, and endless column inches.
How to get them? It’s easy! Just launch a new group every other week, and you’ll get hacks suddenly rushing to write about them, either seriously or as an excuse to make fun of…ah, dammit.
You can read the original news article here
The article is a very left-wing take on the news that Liz Truss is starting her own Conservative party movement (Popular Conservatives aka Pop Cons).
An attempt to rebuild her career after failing as the Prime Minister. It does not mean she necessarily running for PM office again, but if she can build enough political clout, she can find her way back into office in a senior position.
Since the domination of Suella Braverman, politics is all about what you can control, whose money is backing you and who you can influence. Seems a little obvious, however, it is the death of competent politicians who are being replaced by the ‘celeb politicians’ who simply act as a mouth piece for the Lobby’s.
The article is an opinion piece.
Information about The New European
The New European is a British pan-European weekly political and cultural newspaper and website. Launched in July 2016 as a response to the United Kingdom’s 2016 EU referendum, its readership is aimed at those who voted to remain within the European Union.
Formerly owned by Archant, it was announced at the beginning of February 2021 that a consortium including founder Matt Kelly, media executive Mark Thompson and former Financial Times editor Lionel Barber had acquired the newspaper
WTX News rates The New European media bias as left-leaning. It was launched in July 2016 as a response to the United Kingdom’s 2016 EU referendum, its readership is aimed at those who voted to remain within the European Union.
It’s political alignment is Pro-Euroeanism