The BlogCameron's ConservativesA chance to repair the other special relationship.11:00 PM, Nov 29, 2007
• By TIM MONTGOMERIE
THERE HAS LONG BEEN a special relationship within the special relationship between Britain and America. This is the close friendship of Britain's conservative party with America's Republican party. It was particularly strong when Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan were in office, and it remained so with their successors, John Major and George H.W. Bush, especially during the first Gulf War. (The two still holiday together.) This relationship has fallen into disrepair in recent years. Tony Blair became the special friend of America. He understood that the world changed on 9/11, and the White House didn't just get close to Blair during his premiership but also chose to cold shoulder the conservative opposition at the same time. The previous Conservative leader, Michael Howard, was told that he wouldn't be welcome at the White House. Karl Rove took exception to the ways in which Howard's Tories were making the Iraq war difficult for Tony Blair. David Cameron, the current Tory leader, refused to say whether he preferred George W. Bush over John Kerry at the last presidential election. He also used the fifth anniversary of 9/11 to signal disappointment at some aspects of American foreign policy. Just a month ago he publicly eschewed "liberal interventionism" in favor of something he called "liberal conservatism." "Liberal" in that foreign policy should want to see democracy and civil rights extended but "conservative" because there needs to be much more skepticism about our abilities to transform complex cultures.
The largest group within the conservative parliamentary party is the Friends of Israel Group. By two-to-one, rank-and-file Tory party members reject the idea that the United Nations should have any veto on British military involvement in the world. And in another illustration of a stark difference with grassroots Labour party members, a clear majority of Conservatives support the principle of preemption. In ten years of Labour governments, the armed forces have been chronically underfunded, and Tory MPs support--by a margin of ten to one--a larger military. Liam Fox, Michael Gove, and George Osborne--three of David Cameron's most senior shadow cabinet ministers--are hawks. The shadow foreign secretary, William Hague, is a committed Atlanticist.
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