Tories 'Deserved' To Lose General Election, Says Former Conservative MP
A former Conservative MP who lost his seat earlier this month believes his party deserved to lose.
Tobias Ellwood, who was the MP for Bournemouth East for nearly 20 years until 4 July,said his "fractious" party surrendered the "middle ground" to Labour, and that failing to shift back towards the centre will result in a "long time in opposition" for the Conservatives.
Writing in The House, the former defence committee chair also called for Conservative MPs — rather than members — to have the final say in choosing party leaders, warning that appealing primarily to the "party base" will produce further electoral disappointment.
Ellwood was one of 251 Tories to lose their seats at the General Election, in what was the worst result in the party's history.
"The Conservative Party did not deserve to continue in office," wrote Ellwood, adding that how long they spend on the opposition benches ultimately is up to the Tories.
The former Tory MP stressed that the party, which will choose its new leader in early November, must unite before it can think seriously about an electoral recovery.
A party that "fractious, ill-disciplined and scrapping over rival agendas is doomed to lose," he said.
"The pursuance of competing agendas and tribal rivalries has so frequently dominated the headlines that self-indulgence overshadowed policy promotion and scrutiny of Labour."
He also urged his party to move back towards "the very middle ground" of British politics that Prime Minister Keir Starmer "occupied" in order to win an enormous Labour majority.
"At a time when colleagues feel bruised and battered, we should take solace from our tried and tested election-winning formula of the past. The Conservative Party wins elections when it remains a broad and