The Besieged Right Versus the Paranoid Left
An event took place in London this week. You might have heard about it in the news or read about it on Twitter. It was called ‘NatCon’ and people got excited about it.
You would, however, be forgiven for wondering, from the rather hysterical media coverage of the ‘National Conservatism Conference UK 2023’, a) what all the fuss was about; b) what on earth ‘national conservatism’ is; and c) why the conference was taking place. To be perfectly frank, having attended most of the event and enjoyed listening to many of the speakers, I was left none the wiser with respect to these questions myself. But I can perhaps at least shed some light on what I hope I will be forgiven for calling the semiotics of NatCon and the reaction to it – which I think are significant.
Before getting to that, some comments on the substance of the conference itself would be helpful – as most people reading this article will I suspect have drawn the conclusion from media coverage that all manner of outlandish and controversial things were said. In fact, I will have to disappoint you. It would be unfair to the speakers, many of whom were excellent, to say that I’d heard it all before, but to anyone who pays attention to right-wing media commentary on either side of the Atlantic, it was in large part rather familiar stuff. Conservatives, we learned, need to build more houses. They need to fight against wokeism with “facts and truth”. They need to be worried about demography. They need to be prouder of Britain’s history. They need to do more to support the nuclear family. They need to have a youth policy or something like it. They need to manage immigration better. They need to sort out universities. We know all this (and to be honest a lot of Labour MPs would agree with chunks of it, too). So that’s the ‘what was all the fuss about?’ question covered: mountains, molehills, etc.
Where things got interesting, and where something like a debate seemed to be emerging, was on the question of what ‘national conservatism’ really is and whether it is even a useful concept in the British context. Here, there was one major cleavage in evidence: whether being a national conservative means embracing free market capitalism or One Nation Toryism of the paternalist, interventionist stripe. Is capitalism a good thing that increases prosperity and opportunity and means people need the state less since they can look after themselves? Or is it a dangerous thing that reduces us all to a swarm-like borg of alienated, atomised worker-cum-consumer drones lacking culture, family or community?
This is a genuinely vexed question and the speakers had very mixed views. Dan Hannan and Lord Frost argued the former position; Matt Goodwin, Melanie Phillips and Juliet Samuel the latter. But the audience seemed to my eye in any case to have made up its mind: Thatcherism is dead as an intellectual force, irrespective of its merits. The big cheers in the auditorium were for Disraeli, not Hayek. (I was astonished to find myself, at a conference billing itself as being about ‘national conservatism’, hearing Philip Pilkington giving a straight-up Marxian critique of consumer capitalism and its effects on the family, and being roundly applauded for doing so. How things have moved on from Thatcher producing The Constitution of Liberty from her handbag and saying: “This is what we believe.”)
The future of the conservative movement in Britain, then, seems to lie in the big state, for good or ill. Is this, then, what ‘national conservatism’ means? Reheated One Nation Toryism, emphasising intervention in the economy, family, community, and national togetherness and belonging? Tim Stanley and Melanie Phillips, who were among the most impressive speakers I saw, seemed to think so. Nigel Biggar and David Starkey, both also (predictably) good value, supported this reading in their own ways – emphasising the importance of historical narratives in binding a national community together. Seems like it would be politically palatable to a big section of the population, but one wonders what the concept of national conservatism really adds to that old recipe. It sounds rather like what the Tory Party stood for when Harold Macmillan was in charge. I’ve nothing against that, but he didn’t need a concept of ‘national conservatism’ to do any heavy intellectual lifting.
And things get more puzzling when we reflect that Britain has never accurately been described as being a nation – it’s four of them – and that in the modern day devolution has created serious and intractable divisions which it is hard, on its face, to see being mended. Scotland in particular feels like a foreign country to the English visitor now in a way that it never used to before devolution (and I speak as the son of a lad from Paisley). It’s easy to see why the concept of national conservatism works for Hungarians and Israelis, and to a certain degree Americans too – and there were plenty of representatives of all three nationalities at the conference. For the British, I’m just not convinced, and I’m not sure many of the speakers were, either.
So much for what national conservatism is all about, then – still very much open to interpretation. The final of my initial three questions was why the conference was taking place at all. And here, if I am being scrupulously honest, I’m not sure. I am an academic and I know what academic conferences are for (at their best): presenting experimental ideas and getting interesting feedback from an engaged audience. This simply wasn’t the format of NatCon – it mostly consisted of speeches with a little bit of time for Q&As here and there. There was no cutting-edge intellectual agenda being formulated. (I was at times reminded of Ted Honderich’s old complaint that conservatives “make a virtue of not even trying” to explicate anything like a proper political philosophy. We could have heard about Aristotle, MacIntyre, Plato, Strauss, Hegel, Wittgenstein, Heidegger, Girard, and so on, and what they might have had to say about our current predicament – put in an accessible way. We didn’t.)
Yet nor did we get what one would I think have encountered at a lefty equivalent – i.e., lots of break-out sessions and discussion groups and hashing out of tactics that attendees could take away and put into effect in their workplaces or universities. There was no real activism on display. If anything, the mood was more like that of a support group – an opportunity for like-minded people (broadly united by the one really deep-rooted common thread: a hatred of wokeism) to vent and reassure themselves that they were not alone. There’s nothing wrong with that, but I’m not sure what value was being added in practical terms.
It seemed in other words to be an event that hasn’t quite found its feet or worked out what it wants to be. I mean this by way of constructive criticism from an uninvolved well-wisher spectating from the sidelines: it needs to figure this out quickly if it is to do anything constructive.
On, though, to the major issue, which I earlier, inexcusably, labelled the ‘semiotics’. Here, again, I should emphasise that any critical comments I make are intended in good faith. But I think this was where the real significance of the event lay – and the signals being sent were in many regards undesirable.
First, it is undoubtedly true that there was a huge difference between the event that actually took place this week and the event that Guardian and New Statesman journalists imagined was happening. There are big sections of the chattering classes in this country who have simply convinced themselves that the word ‘conservative’ is synonymous with ‘fascist’ and that the word ‘national’ is synonymous with ‘racist’, and that any event describing itself as being about ‘national conservatism’ is QED illegitimate. NatCon had a kind of symbolic value in revealing this to be so – that nobody even bothers pretending to approach these subjects with an open mind anymore. Indeed, it now seems to be the case that the very notion of a group of conservatives getting together to discuss ideas is somehow dangerous per se: the gang of protestors relentlessly disrupting proceedings outside the conference certainly seemed to think so.
But by goodness we (if I can use that word) don’t help ourselves, and it is worth reflecting on the kind of messages that are sent – usually unconsciously – by body language, vocabulary, mood, and approach. While attending the sessions at NatCon, I found myself again and again returning to the question of what I would make of all of this if I was David Aaranovitch (who I spotted, to his great credit, paying attention more or less throughout). And I think – not wishing to put words in his mouth – that I would have found the mood to be two things: a little bit sneering and a little bit insecure.
The sneeriness first. It would be wrong to say there was no humour in evidence at NatCon. It was thin on the ground, but it was there. But there was almost none of the likeable, self-deprecating kind of humour that tends to get an initially dubious audience onside. Instead, I heard a lot of jokes at other people’s expense – usually, let’s face it, about ‘the woke’ and their inconsistencies. I get it: wokeness is incoherent. But a lot of people sincerely do believe in a woke-ish form of social justice, and an awful lot of people already have in their head an image of Tories as smug, self-entitled, snooty and sinister. Does a hall full of ‘national conservatives’ sniggering with derision about the idiocy of social justice warriors, then, send the right kind of signal, or does it rather confirm the image that most normal people have in their heads when it comes to conservatives already? And does it make it more, or less, likely that the average person will uncritically accept the mainstream narrative about NatCon – that is all a bunch of closet racists getting together to plot against social justice?
This matters. Non-conservatives have a network of images in their minds about what ‘conservatism’ really means – i.e., greed, snobbery, discrimination and fustiness. And here I think I should say, trying again to be scrupulously honest, that Douglas Murray’s widely-shared speech struck the wrong kind of tone in emphasising the left’s politics of ‘resentment’ (while standing on a podium in the Natural History Museum beneath a giant skeleton of a blue whale, let’s not forget). Not only do I think that the politics of resentment line is simply wrong (the great problem that the left faces is – as we encounter time and again – a hypertrophied sense of compassion rather than resentment); it just confirms everybody in their pre-existing view that Tories look down on poor people and think of them as envious. We have to get serious about whether we want more political polarisation rather than less. I would much rather there was less, and I think indeed that conservatism – which prizes, after all, national cohesion and shared common ground – ought to be fighting harder for that.
But what I also think David Aaranovitch would have reflected upon is how insecure everybody sounded. Conservatives (rightly, in many cases) feel themselves almost to be under siege culturally and think of themselves as witnesses to a slide into civilisational oblivion. But one doesn’t win converts to a cause by exhibiting a siege mentality, and one really doesn’t win converts by presenting oneself as the passive observer of decline. NatCon was characterised too often by what a centrist or leftwing observer would describe as whingeing from the sidelines about the state of the world. That’s weak and unattractive (even if I often indulge in the temptation myself).
This problem can partly be rectified by trying to get ahead of the game in addressing the genuinely catastrophic problems which are unfolding before our eyes. That requires a proper intellectual agenda, to hark back to a point I made earlier. But it also requires an awareness of what conservatives look like to outsiders, how they comport themselves, the vocabulary they use, and the tenor of their conversations. NatCon had, I’m afraid, a bit of a tin ear when it came to those matters. Quite a few speakers (Nigel Biggar spoke very movingly) mentioned that conservatism is fundamentally about love – of family, of locality, of community, and of country. I agree. But the overall mood being projected was not a particularly loving one.
However, there was another sense in which the conference had a kind of semiotic significance. This was the message it sent about conservatism beginning to get serious again.
Conservatism, it is important to remember, is not an ideology like Marxism, fascism or liberalism. It is, rather, a reflexive opposition to change which is too rapid. This means that its fortunes wax and wane in direct proportion to how rapidly change is taking place. Conservatism was born in the crucible of the French Revolution – the historical example par excellence – and has been at its strongest at other periods of great unsettlement, like in the middle of the 19th Century, the beginning of the Cold War, and in the 1970s and 80s as the social consequences of the 1960s began to play out.
For a long time – roughly between 1991 and 2016 – political consensus was strong and one could kid oneself into thinking that whoever held political power wouldn’t really change a great deal. Now, it is beginning to seem that it matters very much indeed – that, in fact, the most fundamental questions of all (whether women are women, whether national borders should exist or not, whether the nuclear family is good or evil, whether men are intrinsically ‘toxic’, what a human being is, whether there is such a thing as the human soul, whether there should be an age of consent) are at stake and that almost nothing is off the table. It is a time of profoundly disturbing and destabilising change, in other words. And it seems that, as one would expect in such circumstances, conservatism is just beginning to flex its muscles in response.
In this respect, the event was a fascinating one to attend. On the one hand conservatives seem to be sensing that they need to actually get off their backsides and win back political and cultural influence. And on the other, the left seems to have noticed. This, above all, explains the bizarrely histrionic nature of the media’s response to NatCon. If the political establishment felt secure, a few hundred ‘national conservatives’ getting together in London to hobnob would be ignored as a bunch of cranks. That they weren’t indicates in turn that the Establishment itself has figured out there might – just might – be a fight on. This may be the most important set of messages that the conference and the reaction to it sent – that a braver and more determined brand of conservatism is emerging and that the ‘new elites’ really don’t like it. Early days, but it seems on this evidence that things are going to get interesting.
My own gut instinct is that while the Conservative Party hasn’t quite grasped all of this yet, history suggests that it will reinvent itself in order to do so. The Tories basically exist to win elections – that is the parliamentary party’s only real ideology – and a mixture of economic nationalism and social conservatism would be I think a pathway to doing so, irrespective of whether I would personally find it appealing. This probably means that we’re in for a lot more culture war and, frankly, a worse economy. The general mood amongst attendees at NatCon was one of ‘intense relaxation’ about that. My own feeling is that, unfashionable as it might appear, we need to remind ourselves that, as Ryan Bourne recently put it, “When you stray from limiting the state’s role to clear and unambiguous necessities, you create the tools for your opponents’ mischief.” But that ship seems to have sailed.
Dr. David McGrogan is Associate Professor of Law at Northumbria Law School.
Stop Press: In CapX, William Atkinson has written a mixed but largely positive report about the National Conservatism conference.
Stop Press 2: Lord Frost writing in the Telegraph says the Tories should embrace National Conservatism.
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God help us if anyone thinks that a “big state” is the solution to our problems.
As for the Conservatives, hoping they will reinvent themselves is wishful thinking. They will take a beating for next decade or so then swing back into vogue when people tire of Labour, but there will be no shift to the right as long as idiots keep voting for them.
The local elections in our area went to the Lib Dems en masse – the Convicts were wiped out. But as I asked people, what the hell do you think the other criminal party is going to do that the Convicts weren’t already doing? Most people have no idea what or who they are voting for. There are no choices politically, a few independents and smaller parties always smeared as literally-Hitler.
Greens made big gains from Tories in my area. More 20mph zones! Aside from us far-right nutjob conspiracy theorist anti-vaxxers, most people are voting against the Tories because they fancy a change or more free money or think other parties are less corrupt or will magically sort out the economy which is screwed because of policies that all the parties embraced, with the support of the sheeple. It’s very depressing.
The only thing that might galvanise people a bit is mass immigration, but I suspect not enough will wake up until it’s too late.
I would have thought that the thing that will galvanise people is power cuts when they start to happen, along with debilitating ongoing inflation.
They will blame the Tories and vote for left wing parties. I suppose Labour may only last one term if they really screw things up, but they might get lucky and see a global economic boom they can take credit for.
Are you taking the Mickey tof? “Global economic boom.” Sonic boom perhaps.
Taking the mick? Never! Just that there might be an upturn which Labour would profit from. I do agree with you that the rich world is going in a very wrong direction, but I still think it may continue to function in terms of generating material prosperity for a while yet. I predict a gradual decline over centuries rather than imminent collapse. Maybe that’s just wishful thinking.
You’re not wrong. The idea that a ‘bit more’ conservatism will make any difference is absurd. I suspect we’re at or nearing an inflection point. The aim is ABSOLUTE zero emissions by 2050 (see https://www.ukfires.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/Absolute-Zero-online.pdf – “We are legally committed to reducing the UK’s emissions to zero by 2050″) and is enshrined in UK law (thank you Theresa May).
You could be talking about Australia!
Zero difference here.
In my area people abandoined the Tories because they have just adopted a new Local Plan which involves building additional 13,000 homes with 95 per cent of them on the Green Belt.
Sounds like Oldham.
Hang on a minute, David McGrogan says it was stated at the conference “Conservatives, we learned, need to build more houses” but I understood it to have been a conservative conference not one for the Conservatives or the Conservative Party. I’m glad I did not attend as I had thougfhgt to do, as I want nothing to do with the CP.
Did the CP take it over or was it always a front organisation for them?
As the author emphasised the Tory party exists only to win elections. The Tory party is a business run for its major sponsors, not its voters/supporters/members. This event smacks to me of an attempt to rally the bickering troops together to create a united front to take on Labour in eighteen months time.
You can take the Tory party out of the gutter but you can’t take the gutter out of the Tory party.
Thanks for reporting about this event.
“…Britain has never accurately been described as being a nation – it’s four of them…. “ – or, more precisely, it’s three of them (Scotland, England, and Wales) in Great Britain, with that and Northern Ireland being in the United Kingdom.
Whatever one’s position politically, it appears that the Conservative party has exhibited a degree of metamorphosis that exceeds that of some of the others. They are not frozen in the past, by the look of it – although there are noticeable growing pains from time to time.
Private Fraser: the prophet for our time.
Blimey, taxes are at a post-war high. Just how much bigger can the state get? The issue is the state is far too big.
But there is also a problem with capitalism that I would call regulatory capture of the institutions by large corporations that pervades health, energy, public discourse and food among others. For instance, too much big Pharma money goes to MHSA, the Green blob and renewables industry have taken over DESNZ and of course Big Tech wants to censor opinion that dissents from the illiberal consensus (group think).
If a small state model is to work, then we need proper separation of state and corporations. That is the key issue that does not seem to have been addressed by the NatCon conference. Ironically, fusion of state and corporations is the very definition of fascism.
They need to project an idea of hope and optimism like Reagan did with his Morning in America speech.
Johnson tried that with the WEF-required mantra “Build Back Better.”
It hasn’t worked because sufficient people have realised that “BBB” actually means “destroy your living standards.”
I’m a small c conservative who could no longer, under any circumstances, vote Conservative again.
They have completely betrayed the country and the millions of voters who gave them an 80 seat majority in 2019 to (finally) deliver Brexit and at least start the process of reforming how the country is governed and operates – so that the interests of the BRITISH people are prioritised – not Globalist Organisations like the WEF; International Quangos; big business; immigrants/wannabe immigrants.
I’ve watched some of the speeches online. Some of them still know how to talk a good talk, but that’s all it is.
They haven’t the ambition or energy to really take on the legions of lefties who have marched, unopposed, through our Institutions. Let alone the guts.
Spot on!
As someone with conservative principles and a lifelong conservative voter I can’t vote for what calls itself the Conservative and Unionist Party, because it’s not conservative and absolutely not unionist. The group of useless clowns currently in that party have supported some really anti-conservative, anti-freedom anti-free-speech and anti unionist policies that should mean any person within it of honour should resign the whip. I’ve reached the point where I don’t care if the Labour Party win the next general election (although I will never vote for them) because they can’t be any worse than what we have now.
I much regret having missed this event (prior commitment) but this article reads like a very useful reflection on it, particularly since I’d read Matt Godwin’s speech beforehand.
At this stage we still need to tease out a few different strands of thought and practice – a sensible understanding of conservatism, society and nation; a realistic strategy for the future creation and distribution of wealth, and the usefulness or otherwise of the British Conservative & Unionist Party. We must not let our pessimism about the behaviour of the latter in recent years distract us from the former questions.
This event happened because enough people care enough about the difference between personal freedoms versus state-enforced collectivism. Zamyatin, Huxley and Orwell wrote accessible novels about it and Hayek called his book ‘The Road to Serfdom’. As we all know, the problem hasn’t gone away.
Once more unto the breach dear friends, once more.
The real issues, like whether we want parliamentary democracy or a kind of regulatory State run by “experts”, whether we actually want net zero, and so on, are not even discussed by the “main” political parties.
Increasingly it looks to me as if the government is being run by civil servants and not politicians. More and more law is passed by secondary legislation (regulations written by officials and signed by figurehead politicians) rather than by statute. That includes, for example, the lockdowns and censorship of the internet.
Politicians look more and more like people who express an opinion on government, but don’t actually do it.
For this reason, IT DOESN’T MATTER whether Conservatives or Labour win elections; in truth the country is run by people the Americans call the “deep State”.
I am increasingly convinced that the only way to change this is to bring in political appointments to the civil service, with each new elected government clearing out the civil servants from the previous one and putting in its own appointees.
The author did not mention Peter Hitchens as being a speaker. Perhaps it was because he has often expressed the view that such is the rotteness at the very heart of the party that the only way to save Conservatism is to first electorally destroy the Tory Party. And from that destruction Conservatism may be allowed to breathe and prosper.
How anyone can think that the state and its growth is not the biggest part and main cause of the problem, let alone an answer, especially in the UK, after having had a look at the bar chart below, is beyond me.
Although I must say that Fazi’s analysis and argument in general also makes sense, though not his conclusion.
The state has indeed grown to become a slave and enabler of LARGE corporations&co- we have corporatism aka fascism now.
But the solution is to shrink it and have the remnants implement policies and work in favour of SMEs and working people, not to grow the state ever more to rein the large ones in and keep on feeding the rentiers&co.
https://unherd.com/2023/05/the-false-lesson-of-lockdown-scepticism/
Another good idea for Conservatives to adopt:
https://thezman.com/wordpress/?p=29911
“The ancient Greeks had a rule at one time where anyone proposing a change in the current laws did so with a rope around his neck. He stood in front of the people with the noose around his neck and made his appeal. If the people adopted his idea, then he removed the rope and went on his way. If his idea was rejected, he was hanged using the noose that was around his neck. Needless to say, this reduced the demand for change to that which was obvious to the vast majority….
They clearly understood that those always demanding change were a menace. Even in a genuine democracy, someone has to be in charge so that things get done. That person or group of people could not function if they were constantly fielding criticism or adapting to new policies pushed through by the change artists. The noose was the way to limit this impulse and prevent the chaos we are experiencing today… “