I have now run four posts in the series "Crisis for Conservatism" I could of course continue to fifty or a hundred but the point is made and Douglas Carswell MP on Centre Right has added much extra detail,
linked here.
My four posts mentioned random disasters over the past week first the BBC Question Time programme refusal to pledge English residents would be treated as others over prescription charges, second the shameful lack of background knowledge of the troubles and an incomprehensible lack of basic common sense over terrorism shown by the shadow Northern Ireland Secretary, third the gross incompetence all round of David Cameron and the disaster his planned further shirking of his duty will certainly incur and fourthly the failing of the
Conservative Home blog itself to faithfully report the words of one of its own front bench team as printed in Hansard.
So to be positive instead of negative what is to be done? My present views which will not be palatable to the party are as follows:
1. David Cameron and Lord Ashcroft must resign.
2. Deputy Leader Hague (using the known flaws of the Leadership election process and if necessary the broken promise over the EPP which swung many votes) should declare David Davis MP the new Party Leader.
3. Davis should open negotiations with the Electoral Commission to avert the bankruptcy of the party due to the Ashcroft fiasco. Pressure may be necessary to prevent the Commission bankrupting the main opposition party at a time the country is plunging towards an economic abyss.
4. The new Leader of the Opposition should request the Queen re-calls the ratified Lisbon Treaty pending the promised referendum.
5. John Redwood be appointed Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer.
6. William Hague be instructed to arrange a parliamentary majority for a change of government before the summer recess.
Absent some similar steps the Conservative Party would be better dead. (I have repeated these suggested steps as a comment to Mr Carswell's Centre Right comment).
Labels: Conservative Party, David Cameron, David Davis, John Redwood MP
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