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Lets hope the Conservatives outlaw Israel boycotts by the end of 2023

Michael Gove's BDS bill is expected to be approved with no ‘fundamental changes’, Tory sources say

October 6, 2023 14:04
Boycott
4 min read

To paraphrase Ernest Hemingway’s comment on going bankrupt, when power drains away from political parties, it does so gradually, then suddenly – on the night of a general election. 

I spent the first three days of this week in Manchester, at the Conservative Party conference, and since my return several people have asked me the same question: “did it feel very subdued?” The answer is yes, it did. 

The Jewish former Tory leader Michael Howard still felt able, in a column for the Daily Telegraph, to warn that the Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer “doesn’t know what’s coming”, and that with falling inflation and other economic good news, the election likely to be held next year can still be “won from behind”. 

Most of the Tories I spoke to in Manchester disagreed. Was this conference like that of 1991, the last before what then would have looked an equally improbable victory against Labour’s Neil Kinnock in 1992? Or was it closer to 1996, the gathering followed by Tony Blair’s 1997 landslide, which saw the Conservatives excluded from government for the next 13 years? The consensus was: the latter.