Daily Summary – Day 1
The first day of Conservative conference was opened by Sir Patrick McLoughlin, the party’s chair. Despite the poor general election results, he hailed successes in local elections, the fact that the party had increased its share of the vote for the fifth election in a row, and the party’s record in Government, which means ‘more people in work’. This theme of defending the party’s record was continued by Damian Green, the newly-anointed First Secretary of State. He branded Labour the ‘nasty party’ and ‘Britain’s biggest purveyor of fake news’, comparing Labour’s portrayal of the Conservatives as ‘unfeeling’ with the party’s record on increased employment and increased levels of disadvantaged children attending university.
Continuing the education theme, Justine Greening the Secretary of State for Education announced measures to increase teacher retention. These include reimbursing student loans for science and modern foreign language teachers, new bursaries for maths teachers and £6m for maths hubs, £30m for schools which struggle to recruit and keep teachers, and a new network of English hubs, starting in the north. The next cabinet minister to address conference was Sajid Javid, Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government, who had a range of announcements on housing to make. All landlords will have to join an ombudsman scheme, all lettings agents will be regulated, incentives will be offered to landlords with longer-term tenancies, and a consultation will be launched on creating a new housing court. He described the increasing difficulty of affording home ownership as ‘a national outrage’ and directly attributed Corbyn’s success to the Government’s ‘failure on housing’.
The stage was then given to the devolved nations for a session entitled ‘Strengthening the Union between all our citizens’. First on was Scottish Tory leader Ruth Davidson. Jokingly, she called Manchester ‘the Southern powerhouse’ and compared the current success of Corbyn’s Labour Party to Sturgeon’s SNP. She said that the ‘Corbyn bubble’ could ‘burst’ if the Tories worked hard. To do this, she argued that the Tories needed to embody social mobility, called for the party to ‘embrace difference and debate’, and to unite to fight for the future of the union. Describing the Conservatives as the ‘the party of devolution’, she called for the country to be less ‘London-centric’. She was followed by James Brokenshire, Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, who continued the pro-union theme, celebrated growth in the Northern Irish economy, and called on the Northern Irish political parties to reach agreement. Andrew RT Davies, leader of the Welsh Conservatives echoed calls for a united Conservative Party, and cited the threat posed by Jeremy Corbyn, who he said was making promises he couldn’t keep.
Beyond the conference’s secure zone, the city centre was dominated by demonstrators of two sorts. The People’s Assembly Against Austerity has chosen to host a parallel series of events under the banner ‘Take Back Manchester’, and anti-Brexit protestors have also converged on the city, with Lib Dem leader Vince Cable alongside more esoteric attractions, including a singing Boris Johnson impersonator.