Is one-nation Toryism dead? Not yet, but it can’t let Reform and the right provide all the answers | Henry Hill

The complacency of the traditional left of the Conservative party is allowing the voices they abhor to take overThis is not a happy time to be on the one-nation wing of the Conservative party. The final round of last year’s leadership election was between two candidates from the right of the party, and since then it has been Robert Jenrick, the more rightwing of the two, who has emerged as the party’s centre of gravity – a remarkable feat for a man who lost the race.His recently reported comments about a coalition with Reform UK (or perhaps, as sources close to him insist, its voters) have put the question of the Tories’ future direction back in the spotlight. Is Nigel Farage the herald of a fundamental rightward shift? Is this, as one fellow journalist put it to me, “the final death of one-nation Toryism”? Continue reading...

Apr 25, 2025 - 17:09
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Is one-nation Toryism dead? Not yet, but it can’t let Reform and the right provide all the answers | Henry Hill

The complacency of the traditional left of the Conservative party is allowing the voices they abhor to take over

This is not a happy time to be on the one-nation wing of the Conservative party. The final round of last year’s leadership election was between two candidates from the right of the party, and since then it has been Robert Jenrick, the more rightwing of the two, who has emerged as the party’s centre of gravity – a remarkable feat for a man who lost the race.

His recently reported comments about a coalition with Reform UK (or perhaps, as sources close to him insist, its voters) have put the question of the Tories’ future direction back in the spotlight. Is Nigel Farage the herald of a fundamental rightward shift? Is this, as one fellow journalist put it to me, “the final death of one-nation Toryism”? Continue reading...