UCUNF not the end for Tories

By Jeffery Peel
Friday, 2 July 2010

Just a few days ago, Ed Best, writing in the Daily Telegraph, noted that, "democracies where voting patterns are entirely decided by ethnic group, and where parties gravitate away from the centre ground, are not really democracies at all but tribal head-counting competitions."

Thankfully, it would appear that in Northern Ireland the local electorate is getting increasingly fed-up with head-counting. Turnout here, at the recent general election, was the lowest of all the UK regions. It slumped to under 57%.

The fact that nearly half of the electorate voted for "none of the above" - by not voting at all - says a lot about the malaise. In short, there is no centre-ground that focuses on policies that might benefit the local electorate - that might get things done, rather than squabble constantly about non-issues of "identity" or "culture" or, let's call a spade a spade, religion.

The attempt by the Conservative Party and Ulster Unionist Party to fill the centre-ground void was utterly shambolic.

The local Conservative Party organisation - that had succeeded, over the decades, to maintain its non-sectarian credentials - was dragged into a sorry mess. The so-called "new force" was just the same old UUP with new posters. After the Fermanagh South Tyrone unionist carve-up, the entire edifice crumbled.

So what now? Well, the general election saw the Conservative Party invest hundreds of thousands of pounds in a project led by a rudderless UUP. Now is the time to admit that the project was a mess.

In short, the Conservative Party needs to start from scratch again, building an organisation that will win elections. It needs to stand on its own two feet as a progressive, centre-right force in Northern Ireland politics.

The local party executive needs to get a grip and make clear what it's about - in short, creating a centre-ground political party that appeals to all, regardless of religion or so-called 'national identity'.

The Conservative Party, in coalition, is showing that it can be effective and progressive. It can do the same in Northern Ireland.

If it does, people might just start voting again - and for the right reasons.

NiteLife: White's Tavern

Had a big night out? Click here to send your pics

In Pictures: Lingerie Super Bowl 2012

In Pictures: Lingerie Super Bowl 2012

Women: Can you flaunt too much?

Women: Can you flaunt too much?

Old School Pictures: Ian Paisley

Old School Pics: Girls Aloud Nadine Coyle

To launch gallery click image or select school below

Methodist College, Campbell College, Grosvenor,
Bangor Grammar, Dunlambert, St Augustine's,
St Dominic's, Royal Academy, Ballymena Academy

Teletoons by Stevie Lee

Teletoons by Stevie Lee

Follow us on Twitter

In Pictures: The Troubles

Titanic Gallery: First class bedroom

Titanic Gallery: exclusive collection

Out & About: Pizza Night

Out & About: Pizza Night

Columnist Comments

gail_walker

Gritty, moving and heroic...Billy plays captured life here

It was the best of times, it was the worst of times ... Sunday's 30th anniversary screening of the seminal Too Late to Talk to Billy was riveting viewing. But it wasn't nostalgic viewing.
ed_curran

Parties need better defence in Stormont's game of two halves

Surprise, surprise. Peter Robinson has been to his first gaelic match, Martin McGuinness is heading for Windsor Park and the Ulster Unionists have scored another own goal.
nuala_mckeever

Why trying to go on a diet is never really a piece of cake

Some people make New Year’s resolutions, I make lists. Every new year I determine to keep track of everything I spend and everything I eat and drink.

frances_burscough

Scary movie? Their jaws were sore from laughing

Teenage boys love horror films and I have two who are in charge of the remote control in our house, so naturally there’s gore-a-plenty on the box most weekends. However, until recently one film was banned.

TeleToons

Teletoons gallery by Stevie Lee

Latest Comments