Theresa May seeks to project the image of a 21st century
Iron Lady, but the last 24 hours of political calamity have melted the iron
veneer. Resignations, U-turns, gaffes. It has been the omnishambles to end all
omnishambles.
When David Cameron came to power in 2010, he promised the
public they could ‘Vote Blue, Go Green’. From his cycling to work, to his husky
sled trips in Alaska, the new Conservatives were all about keeping our green
and pleasant land just that – by recognising the urgency of action on climate
change.
In light of this, putting a third runway at Heathrow
airport and increasing the air traffic (and therefore pollution) over London
and surrounding areas was viewed as pretty inconsistent. David Cameron promised
he would oppose a third runway on these grounds, “No ifs, and no buts”. The battle
against the Airport Commission which favoured the Heathrow expansion, a large
section of the Conservative party, and the former Prime Minister continued
until his final days in power.
The two faces of Theresa May
Theresa May has always been a vocal opponent of the third
runway. She sent newsletters to her constituents promising to “fight to stop” a
third runway at Heathrow, and while Home Secretary, even lobbied the
independent Airports Commissioner over environmental risks from the proposed
expansion. In 2010, Theresa May celebrated the “victory” of the Cameron
government scrapping plans for the third runway. Her opposition continued
throughout the Coalition and Cameron governments. Until she became Prime
Minister, and gave the project the green light this week.
Worse, her team then attempted to hide all traces of her
former opposition to the plans – which sent the media into a tailspin.
Billionaire environmentalist and the Conservatives’
defeated candidate for Mayor of London Zac Goldsmith resigned as a Conservative
MP at news the government was pushing ahead with the third runway. He will be
standing for his Richmond constituency as an independent candidate, with
Conservative MPs vowing not to stand against him.
Goldsmith’s resignation leaves unelected Prime Minister
Theresa May with a party divided over grammar schools, Britain’s future in
Europe, immigration and the single market, the meaning of Brexit, and now, the
expansion of Heathrow too. With a majority of just 10 seats in parliament, and
a rejuvenated opposition north and south of the border – May is in big trouble.
Boris Johnson is rumoured to be plotting his own coup based
on Heathrow and Brexit, Michael Gove is lurking in the wings like some sort of
bespectacled Frank Underwood, there is a growing sense that the wheels are
coming off just about everything at the moment – and a divided government, and
mutinous parliamentary Labour Party have devolved the most serious discussions
to nationalist parties in Scotland and Wales.
If things continue this way, we may be holding a general
election sooner than 2020.
http://www.thecanary.co/2016/10/26/theresa-mays-government-meltdown-24-hours-utter-calamity-editorial/
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