Leaders | Adrift

Rishi Sunak’s strategic genius

The Rwanda policy is bad. But the Conservatives are the real problem

Illustration: Justin Metz

The conservative party has changed Britain profoundly during its 13 years in office. One such change is that it has made the absence of chaos seem like competence and the previously unthinkable seem acceptable. A prime minister should not be a relief because he did not blow up the financial markets within a month, yet Rishi Sunak was just that. Governments with large majorities should not lose votes in the early stages of legislation, yet the fact that the new Rwanda bill passed a second reading this week was greeted as a triumph of Tory party management. It is not normal for a British government to suspend human-rights legislation, ignore international law or set Parliament in opposition to the judiciary, yet moderate Tory MPs cravenly go along with it. Britain needs stability. The Rwanda row underlines that neither Mr Sunak nor the Tories can provide it.

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This article appeared in the Leaders section of the print edition under the headline “Rishi Sunak’s strategic genius”

From the December 16th 2023 edition

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