LONDON: Support for the Conservatives among ethnic minority voters is at its lowest level for sixteen years, with the party’s stance on immigration to blame, according to internal party memos.
New 10 Downing Street Chief of Staff Gavin Barwell has been giving presentations to MPs over the past two weeks, detailing its standing with BME communities.
One MP told The Times the presentations had been “really gloomy.”
Another said: “We made big strides under Cameron. For reasons of image, not policy, it seems to have gone backwards.”
One party figure said: “We’ve been told that BME support is down to 2001 levels, when Iain Duncan Smith was leader. It’s that bad The private polling showed that BME voters identified with Conservative values such as freedom and choice and caring for future generations, but would not vote Tory.”
BME voters are much more likely to vote for Labour, with data from the 2017 election showing that the Conservatives only achieved 17 per cent of the ethnic minority vote, which is down from 21 per cent in 2015.
In her speech on becoming Prime Minister, Theresa May vowed to tackle “burning injustices” such as racial inequality. Standing outside 10 Downing Street she said: “If you’re black, you’re treated more harshly by the criminal justice system than if you’re white,” and promised to take action.
But, in her conference speech several months later she memorably said: “If you believe you are a citizen of the world, you are a citizen of nowhere.”
The Independent
|