Politics

‘Stop the boats’ slogan was error, says Cleverly

PA James Cleverly at the Conservative Party conference in BirminghamPA

Rishi Sunak’s “Stop the boats” slogan was an “error”, Conservative leadership contender James Cleverly has said.

The slogan, adopted in January 2023, referred to the then government’s efforts to curb the number of people trying to reach the UK by crossing the English Channel in small boats.

Cleverly, who later used the phrase numerous times when he was home secretary, told a fringe event at the Tory conference in Birmingham it “distilled a very, very complicated and challenging problem into a soundbite”.

When even one boat crossing could be deemed “a failure”, it was “an unachievable target”, he said.

Cleverly is one of four remaining candidates making their pitches to party activists at the conference, along with Robert Jenrick, Kemi Badenoch and Tom Tugendhat.

Conservative MPs will narrow the field to just two in further votes at Westminster on 9 and 10 October.

Party members will then choose between the final two, with a new leader due to be announced on 2 November.

The Conservatives suffered their worst result in a general election in July.

A minister throughout the last parliament, Cleverly was highly critical of the Conservative government’s response to the Covid pandemic, calling it the worst thing it did.

“Lockdowns were wrong, we got it badly, badly, badly wrong,” he said.

The “whole world was scared”, but “we turned into all the things that I thought perhaps we could never become”, he added.

Cleverly argued the UK went from being a “freedom-loving nation” to “snooping on our neighbours, dobbing in our friends and cancelling Christmas”.

“We deified certain experts” and epidemiological ones “became gods among gods”, while experts on domestic abuse, children’s mental health and the economy were “relegated” in importance, he added.

“Let’s never make that error again,” he said.

He put part of the blame for the Tories’ election defeat on the tone of its message to the country, which he likened to “nails down a blackboard”.

“We were harsh and shrill, and not nice”, he added, arguing that this resulted in many previous Conservative voters backing the Liberal Democrats or staying at home.

He also said his party needed to talk less and deliver more.

“Delivery will win us back voters from Reform. Tonal change will win us back voters from the Lib Dems and those who stayed at home.”

Earlier, Cleverly told a different fringe event the party had to change not only its tone but also its behaviour to improve its appeal to younger people and women.

Years of infighting and “backstabbing” had alienated many in those sections of the electorate, he said.

‘Freaking out’

The Conservatives needed to be more optimistic, engaging and positive about the future, rather than focusing on the past, to win the right to be listened to, he added.

The shadow home secretary observed that women were disproportionate users of public services – at the school gate, doctor’s surgery or the police as victims of crime.

The Tories therefore needed to temper their desire for a “smaller, more effective state” by not “freaking out” women who relied on those services and winning back the public’s trust that they would run them properly, he argued.

Cleverly also called the party to recruit more women and to make better use of its existing female members.

“We are too blokey as a party, and I say that as a bloke,” he said.

He spoke of the level of abuse women in politics had to contend with, and said he realised that, despite the progress made, life in general was different and harder for girls.

“Men wear the same clothes every day, women don’t have that luxury. If I put on weight, no one gives a monkeys.

“If women wear a different pair of glasses, some men will ask ‘what are they trying to achieve by that?'”

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