Friday, 16 October 2015

To Begin Unpicking

For a few months in 1992, the Conservatives bellowed that they were going to be in office until the crack of doom. And now, as Owen Jones writes:

It is a moment of anguish that should have caused discomfort in both No 10 and No 11.

“You’re about to cut tax credits when you promised you wouldn’t,” an anguished mother yelled from last night’s Question Time audience

“I work bloody hard for my money, to provide for my children, to give them everything they’ve got, and you’re going to take it away from me and them. Shame on you!” 

But what should really frighten the government is who she used to vote for: the Tories.

The “work penalty” – as some have begun calling the cuts to tax credits – will not just hammer poorer voters, who disproportionately tend to either vote Labour or not vote at all.

Victims include middle-income Britons and, yes, those who plumped for the Tories in May. That’s why David Cameron stood up on national television to pledge that tax credits were “not going to fall”.

Millions of working families – “hard-working strivers”, as the Tories sometimes label them – are going to be significantly worse off, even with other measures taken into account.

No wonder the government today stands accused of attempting to cover the impact of the work penalty. They are fully aware that middle-England Tory voters are among those who are going to start noticing their wallets getting lighter.

As one expert pollster points out, swing voters who are very likely to turn up to polling stations are among those being hit: the “quiet ones”, he calls them.

The message the Tories are sending them, he writes, is: “We know you’re working, but we’re going to penalise you anyway.”

And, as he underlines: “These are voters who do not forget … and if Labour is smart it will press home this point repeatedly. George Osborne is hurting the precise demographic groups which delivered him victory in May.”

Everybody agrees that if Labour is to stand a chance of regaining power, the party has to win back at least some Tory voters.

Its chances of doing so have been widely mocked. But here is how the party can do it: but only if it is savvy.

When I shared the video of the disillusioned Tory voter, some of the responses were less than sympathetic. She was berated for bringing it on herself and for having an “I’m all right, Jack” attitude.

This is political suicide. Tory voters having their tax credits chipped away desperately need to be love-bombed.

You are told you are doing the right thing. You are told that you are hard-working and you are striving. And yet you are being penalised.

Hundreds of thousands of those affected are self-employed people, a natural constituency for the Tories.

Winning over Tory voters looked like a forlorn task. It will be difficult, to say the least.

But the work penalty shows it may at least be possible to begin unpicking their electoral coalition.

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