UK General Election 2019
Safeguarding the country
This edition of Karina’s Column is based on an interview with James Arbuthnot, a long-standing Conservative politician who now sits in the House of Lords
With the UK’s momentous General Election a day away, yet another respected career politician is joining the chorus lead by former Prime Ministers Sir John Major and Tony Blair in calling for moderates to vote across parties, be it the Liberal Democrats in some cases, or a “sensible Conservative or a sensible Labour person.”
James Arbuthnot, a Conservative peer whose career encompassed the role of Chief Whip, Minister for Defence Procurement and a decade as Chairman of the influential Defence Select Committee, has a one-word answer when asked if he is still a member of the Party: “No.”
“I cancelled my subscription when Boris Johnson became leader, for two reasons,” he adds. “First, because I didn’t believe the policies the Conservative Party was following over Brexit. And the second because I didn’t have faith or belief or respect for Boris Johnson.”
Martin Wolf, Chief Economics Commentator of The Financial Times, argues that a hung Parliament would be the best result of the December 12th election, as it would make the major parties realise the damage arising out of their extreme positions and force them to rediscover their moderate souls.
Safeguarding the country
This edition of Karina’s Column is based on an interview with James Arbuthnot, a long-standing Conservative politician who now sits in the House of Lords. It is not representative of the views of Robinson Hambro Ltd.
With the UK’s momentous General Election a day away, yet another respected career politician is joining the chorus lead by former Prime Ministers Sir John Major and Tony Blair in calling for moderates to vote across parties, be it the Liberal Democrats in some cases, or a “sensible Conservative or a sensible Labour person.”
James Arbuthnot, a Conservative peer whose career encompassed the role of Chief Whip, Minister for Defence Procurement and a decade as Chairman of the influential Defence Select Committee, has a one-word answer when asked if he is still a member of the Party: “No.”
“I cancelled my subscription when Boris Johnson became leader, for two reasons,” he adds. “First, because I didn’t believe the policies the Conservative Party was following over Brexit. And the second because I didn’t have faith or belief or respect for Boris Johnson.”
Martin Wolf, Chief Economics Commentator of The Financial Times, argues that a hung Parliament would be the best result of the December 12th election, as it would make the major parties realise the damage arising out of their extreme positions and force them to rediscover their moderate souls.
“It definitely resonates with me,” says Lord Arbuthnot. “The country is being sold a type of Brexit that it was promised it would not have. We were told that we would get millions of extra money a week to spend on things. We weren’t told that it was going to cost us billions, the billions that it is now going to cost us in terms of lost growth, lost productivity and lost friendships with our closest allies.”
“I’m appalled at the notion that we ought to be doing things alone rather than with our closest friends,” he adds, speaking at a breakfast hosted by the Worshipful Company of International Bankers, a livery company in the City of London.
A number of moderate members of Parliament from both major parties are not standing in this election. On the Conservative side it includes former Home Secretary Amber Rudd and veteran MP Sir Nicholas Soames. “A Conservative Party that has no room for [former Minister of State for Digital and the Creative Industries] Margot James, [Tory grandee] Ken Clark, [former Chancellor] Philip Hammond doesn’t strike me as the Conservative Party that I joined and worked for, for all of my life,” says Lord Arbuthnot, who calls the Labour Party “unacceptably Marxist, if there is an acceptable Marxism.”
The father of four, married to Emma Arbuthnot, the Chief Magistrate for the UK and Wales, calls for curbs to the laddish culture that has become prevalent in Parliament, which he points out is awful for most men too.
“I must say I’m so thankful to be in the relative sanctuary of the House of Lords. My old people’s home. I bring the average age down, by the way,” he says with a twinkle in his eye.
Since stepping down as a politician, Lord Arbuthnot has taken on Non-Executive and consultancy roles that leverage his knowledge of the defence industry. At one point he was a Director of SC Strategy, whose directors include Sir John Scarlett, former head of MI6. He is currently Chairman of the Advisory Board of Thales UK, the defence and technology company and Chairman of Electricity Resilience Ltd.
He concurs with national security advisers like Lord Evans of Weardale, a former MI5 director general, that a parliamentary report into alleged Russian interference in the UK democratic process should be released to the public before the General Election. The government insists that it will take much longer to redact confidential information in the report.
“It’s a worry to me that the Intelligence and Security Committee (ISC) has produced a report about Russian potential interference in the referendum results and in the 2017 election. It was seen by the security services in March of this year, cleared by them, probably with some redactions and it’s been with the Prime Minister for some time. He appears to show no interest in publishing it before the election,” notes Lord Arbuthnot. “I think that it is relevant to the voters. I think they might like to see what Russia has been doing.”
In the summer of 1996, the IRA planned to blow up enough of the UK electricity grid to leave London and the South East in darkness for months. Their plot was foiled. However, since then our dependence on electricity has grown exponentially.
“I believe that if the Chinese or the Russians wanted to switch off our electricity grid, they have enough capability in place to be able to do it within the next 20 minutes, if they wanted to,” says Lord Arbuthnot. “But they don’t want to because if they did that, they would collapse the world economy and along with it, they would collapse their own economy. What I think they do want to do is make it impossible for that to be an existential threat against their country.”
He suppresses a smile while declining to respond to a question about whether we have the capability to close down the Russian, Chinese or Iranian grids: “I couldn’t possibly comment.”
As this interview is published, a Conservative majority is looking most likely. However we are living in unprecedented times, not only in the moderates deserting the two major parties, but in a new, hate-filled political tribalism. What is unquestionable is that the exodus of moderate politicians is already causing great harm to the British political system. May the winner move to heal the wounds of society and the body politic.
Lord Arbuthnot was interviewed as part of the Worshipful Company of International Bankers Talk & Toast power couple series sponsored by Streets Consulting.