Skip to main content
Logo icon
Lord Lexden

Main navigation

  • About
  • Articles & Reviews
  • Letters
  • News
  • Parliament
  • Publications
  • Contact
Logo icon
Lord Lexden

The Conservative Party's greatest crisis ever?

  • Tweet
Saturday, 27 April, 2019
  • Articles
lexden

In Alistair Lexden’s judgement, the Conservative Party is now facing the greatest crisis in its long history. Sadly, this government has failed to meet the huge challenge that Brexit created; the consequences have been disastrous.

Following an interview in early April on  BBC Radio Four’s Sunday morning news programme ‘Broadcasting House’, Alistair Lexden set out his views on the gravity of the Party’s position in the leading letter in The Times on 26 April; the main points in it were also included in a prominent article in the paper on the same day. His views are of course debatable, as a letter published the following day pointed out. They are, however, based on close study of the Party’s history over many years.

Sir, The Conservative Party is in greater turmoil today than ever before in its long history. Theresa May has completely lost its confidence both in and outside Parliament. The 1922 Committee, which determines how Tory leaders are elected, must respond to these unprecedented circumstances. It should revise the present arrangements, introduced after significant changes in 1998, under which the leader can be challenged annually if 15 per cent of Tory MPs write secret letters demanding a vote. Thirty per cent should become the threshold; challenges should be permitted whenever it is reached, with the disaffected making their names public (in the past letters have been forged). That will ensure that a disastrous leader cannot cling on for months without significant support. As Churchill said, leaders who fail must be poleaxed.

Lord Lexden
Conservative Party historian

You may also be interested in

tree

Labour's schools tax raid sums don't add up

Monday, 16 June, 2025
The following letter was published in The Daily Telegraph on 16 June in slightly edited form.SIR – At the spending review, Rachel Reeves boasted  proudly that she had ended “the tax loophole which exempted private schools from VAT”, a grossly misleading description of the tax exemptio

Show only

  • Articles
  • Recent News
  • Speeches

Lord Lexden OBE

Footer

  • About RSS
  • Accessibility
  • Cookies
  • Privacy
  • About Lord Lexden
  • Articles and Reviews
  • Letters
  • Parliament
  • Publications
Promoted by Alan Mabbutt on behalf of Lord Lexden, both at 4 Matthew Parker Street, London, SW1H 9HQ
Copyright 2025 Lord Lexden OBE . All rights reserved.
Powered by Bluetree