
The inability to grasp the concerns of voters and resolve internal divisions will be the death of British and Australian conservatives.
Perhaps the most noticeable feature of politics in the West in recent years has been the swift and irreversible demise of traditional conservative parties.
The disappearance of these parties has been dramatically illustrated by the grim fates that now await the UK Conservative Party and the Liberal/National Party coalition in Australia.
The Conservative Party governed the UK from 2010 until last year. The Coalition government held office in Australia from 1996 to 2007, and from 2013 until 2022. Both of these parties were soundly defeated at the polls by ideologically unified social democratic parties that were led by uninspiring and pedestrian politicians – namely Keir Starmer and Anthony Albanese.
This suggests that voters rejected the conservatives, rather than warmly embracing their social democratic opponents. UK Labour’s rapid fall from grace since last year’s election victory and the party’s current unpopularity confirms the correctness of this view.
More troubling for conservatives in the UK and Australia is the fact that both of these once dominant parties – so shortly after losing office – now find themselves in such acute states of internal disarray and that they have no realistic prospect of regaining office in the foreseeable future. In fact, it is clear that neither party has a viable long-term future at all.
How has this extraordinary state of affairs come about? A number of fundamental causes suggest themselves.
First, the emergence of a new global post-industrial economic order over the past three decades – based upon renewable energy and novel technologies and ruled by new global elites – has created deep-seated ideological divisions within all traditional conservative parties in the West.
Hence the now unbridgeable divisions that exist within these parties over net zero, mass immigration, so-called “culture wars” issues, transgender rights etc. – and, for the UK Conservative Party, the additional divisive issue of Brexit.
Hence also the ongoing destructive debates within these parties as to whether they should embrace a right-wing “populist” agenda or remain committed to a centrist, more traditional conservative political program. This fundamental ideological division reveals itself most pathetically in the sad phenomenon of former conservative leaders like Liz Truss and Scott Morrison finding new careers – post politics – as sycophantic bit players at Donald Trump rallies in America.
No contemporary political party that lacks ideological coherence can expect to achieve any degree of political success in the West – because an increasingly cynical and alienated electorate will not vote for a party that is racked with internal divisions and cannot commit to a clear political program.
Second, these conservative parties – although in power for most of the past two decades – have resolutely refused to implement the kind of radical economic and social reforms necessary to remedy the serious economic inequalities and social problems that continue to bedevil all Western liberal democracies.
In fact, despite their professed commitment to traditional values, conservative parties have – just like their social democratic counterparts – enthusiastically embraced and implemented the economic, cultural, and foreign policies of the new and now dominant global elites.
And these elites – it must be said – are perhaps the most avaricious, narcissistic, and ideologically fanatical ruling class to have ever emerged in the modern West. In fact, they make the 19th-century European liberal bourgeoisie look like civilized ruling class, and benefactors not only of the lower orders, but mankind generally.
Is it any wonder, then, that ordinary voters in the West who have been brutally displaced economically and culturally by globalization – these voters include both the traditional working class and the old nation-state-based middle class – have deserted conservative parties that promised to protect their interests, but cynically failed to do so for 20 years?
Populism is clearly a false hope, but it has a unified ideology and political program, and populist leaders – unlike conservative politicians – have not yet been shown conclusively to be nothing more than the corrupt lackeys of the new global elites.
Third, the quality and political judgment of recent conservative political leaders in the UK and Australia has been simply appalling. Conservative parties were once led by statesmen – Churchill and Menzies, for example – but that has not been the case for decades.
The less said about David Cameron – who singlehandedly created the Brexit fiasco – Theresa May, Liz Truss (who George Galloway once aptly described as “thick as mince in a bottle”) and Rishi Sunak, the better.
And when the UK Conservative Party finally elected a leader who could win elections by promising to “level up” those left behind by globalization – Boris Johnson – it foolishly and jealously deposed him for the egregious crime of failing to strictly observe the Covid lockdown rules.
The conservative coalition in Australia has been similarly bereft of competent leaders since the centrist John Howard, who was prime minister from 1996 until 2007 – an era before the complete domination of the new global economy, and one when globalist ideologies could still be ignored by conservative political leaders.
Tony Abbott was a divisive and incompetent prime minister – and his own party deposed him after only 18 months in office. Scott Morrison and Peter Dutton were political lightweights who struggled to keep a deeply divided party from splintering altogether.
What then does the future hold for the UK Conservative Party and the conservative coalition in Australia? If the events of the past few weeks are any indication, the future of both parties is bleak in the extreme.
The performance of the beleaguered Conservative leader – Kemi Badenoch – at the recent Conservative Party conference was simply pathetic. Still refusing to outline the party’s policy agenda, Badenoch sought to win over British voters by promising to abolish stamp duty. One can well imagine the reaction of ordinary UK voters, struggling to pay their power bills and tired of funding the conflict in Ukraine, to this wonderfully grand policy announcement.
Badenoch’s keynote address contained endless platitudes, and absolutely no insight into her party’s rapidly intensifying decline. “We are the party who (sic) can deliver a stronger economy and secure our borders,” said Badenoch – apparently having forgotten her own party’s abysmal record on these issues when in government for over a decade.
If Badenoch believes such nonsense, then she is a “downright moron” – a phrase coined by the American journalist H. L. Mencken to describe American politicians in the 1920s. If she does not, then she is a downright liar.
Badenoch, of course, remains leader on sufferance – still there only because her potential challenger, the right-wing Robert Jenrick, does not wish to depose her until after next year’s May council elections, at which the Conservatives are expected to be decimated.
The latest polls show the Conservatives at around 17% support – lagging behind not only Reform and Labour, but also the Liberal Democrats. Meanwhile, the number of disaffected Conservative politicians defecting to Reform continues to increase.
The coalition in Australia has fared little better than the UK Conservatives since its crushing election loss at the hands of Labor earlier this year.
Ridden with bitter internal divisions over net-zero emissions and mass immigration, the party elected a moderate female leader – Sussan Ley – by a very slim margin after the recent election defeat. Unfortunately, Ley is an embarrassing Antipodean version of Liz Truss, and, like Badenoch, she steadfastly refuses to set out a policy agenda until closer to the next election – a ploy designed to avoid bitter internal policy disputes, but which only causes the party to appear to stand for nothing.
Why do floundering conservative parties, in a desperate attempt to win the female vote, cynically elect incompetent women leaders – all the while intending to replace them before the next election? Such transparent virtue-signaling surely fools no one, least of all female voters.
Two right-wing shadow cabinet members recently resigned over Ley’s moderate stance on net zero and immigration, and it is clear that Ley’s potential right-wing challenger – Andrew Hastie, a Robert Jenrick clone – is simply biding his time, perhaps until early next year, to depose her.
And as bitter squabbling continues within the coalition, this week former National Party leader and deputy prime minister – Barnaby Joyce – announced that he was leaving the coalition to join the extremist right-wing One Nation Party, where he will be free to campaign against net zero and mass immigration.
Meanwhile, Tony Abbott, the failure of a former prime minister who predicted that Rishi Sunak would win last year’s UK election and is now proffering gratuitous advice to Badenoch, has mounted a ruthless campaign, in conjunction with the Murdoch media, to depose the hapless Ley as leader. Some extremely deluded right-wing Liberals are even suggesting that Abbott return to parliament and run for leader himself.
The Abbott-controlled right wing of the coalition believes that a Trumpian agenda can win over Australian voters to the coalition – despite the fact that Peter Dutton briefly flirted with Trumpism at the recent election and was punished by voters for having done so.
And Prime Minister Albanese’s extraordinarily successful meeting with Donald Trump at the White House this week – Trump described him as “a great leader” – has made Abbott and his deranged supporters look like the political dills that they are. Don’t they understand that Trump admires political winners – not failures that sycophantically mimic him?
Not surprisingly, the coalition’s poll figures have recently plummeted to around 25% – its lowest figure ever. One disgruntled Liberal senator recently – aptly – described the coalition as a “clown show.”
In fact, the parallels between the calamitous predicaments of the conservative parties in the UK and Australia are as striking as they are dire. The UK Conservative Party, confronted as it is by an increasingly popular Reform Party, is clearly finished as an effective political force. So too is the conservative coalition in Australia, although it may linger on for longer than its UK counterpart – simply because no populist party has yet emerged in this country to challenge it directly.
Such is the well-deserved fate of both of these conservative parties, led by political non-entities, deeply divided ideologically, and unable to formulate a coherent policy agenda – let alone comprehend or meaningfully respond to the legitimate demands of the increasing number of economically disadvantaged and culturally alienated voters in both the UK and Australia.
The author of this news item has overlooked a very simple and obvious explanation for the “demise of traditional conservative parties”. Such conservatives happened to be ruling in government in both the UK and in Australia when despotic and totalitarian mandates exploiting covid as an excuse were imposed on unsuspecting and innocent people. Such disgraceful totalitarian governments were voted out of office at the next scheduled election.
What about New Zealand with your your statement “…when despotic and totalitarian mandates exploiting covid as an excuse were imposed on unsuspecting and innocent people.” Are you suggesting that the Labour led coalition with Jacinda Adern at the head was a Conservative Government?
No, NZ’s Jacindagrad was never conservative. Jacindagrad happened to be in government when the mandates were imposed in NZ. They suffered the very same fate as the UK and Australian governments who imposed similar mandates on their populations.
Whether or not the governments being voted out (this is the author’s basic theme) were conservative is irrelevant as you have pointed out in your counter-example in New Zealand. The correct conclusion is that the voters were voting out dictatorships, not conservative governments.
It happened long before then.
The author of this article lauds Boris Johnson as an ‘election winner’. I’d argue that Johnson has the blood of millions of Ukrainian and Russian soldiers on his hands. It has been known for quite awhile that Johnson told Zelensky in April 2022 to keep fighting rather than accept the negotiated peace deal with Russia.. Now it would appear that Johnson received £1 million from a shareholder of a UK defence company that would benefit financially from having an endless war in Ukraine. Boris Johnson is just an evil corrupt blowhard.
I concur.
Basically, the people are waking up and had enough.
However, this article is one like so many other contemporary ones, namely trying to make a diluted lame point by omitting the Whammo:
The author has omitted a multitude of other countries where the political cookie crumbles on all sides.
Here is a global list on countries where The People are taking control of their political (and human) future by voting for parties that LISTEN to the voters:
Country……….’Right-Wing’ Party / Coalition……..Vote Share / Seats
Argentina La Libertad Avanza (Milei) 55.7% (2023 runoff)
Austria Freedom Party (FPÖ) 25.7% (2024 legislative)
Belgium Vlaams Belang 15.8% (2024 federal), largest opposition in Flanders
Bolivia Right-wing coalition (2025) Defeated MAS, first non-socialist government in decades
Brazil Liberal Party (Bolsonaro-aligned) 49.1% (2022 presidential)
Canada Conservative Party Leading in polls (2025, no election yet)
Chile Republican Party (Ernesto Tancredi) Gaining influence; right bloc won 2023 constitutional vote
Croatia Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ) 37.3% (2024 parliamentary)
Denmark Danish People’s Party (DF) Regained parliamentary presence (2022)
Ecuador National Democratic Action (ADN) – Daniel Noboa 52.4% (2023 runoff)
Estonia Conservative People’s Party (EKRE) 17.1% (2023)
Finland Finns Party 20.1% (2023), part of governing coalition
France National Rally (RN) & allies 33.1% (2024 snap, first round)
Germany Alternative for Germany (AfD) 25.8%
Greece New Democracy (ND) 40.5% (2023)
Hungary Fidesz 54.0% (2022)
India Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) 37.4% (2024)
Italy Brothers of Italy (FdI) 26.0% (2022)
Latvia National Alliance (NA) Part of ruling coalition (2022–2025)
Lithuania Homeland Union (TS-LKD) 21.2% (2020), leading opposition (2024)
Netherlands Party for Freedom (PVV) 23.5% (2023), leads coalition government
Norway Progress Party (FrP) 15.5% (2021), kingmaker in right bloc
Panama Realizing Goals (LM) – José Raúl Mulino 33.5% (2024 presidential)
Peru Popular Force (Fujimorismo) Strong opposition; conservative influence in Congress
Poland Law and Justice (PiS), Karol Nawrocki (President) 50.4% (2025 presidential)
Portugal Democratic Alliance (AD) 32.7% (2024)
Slovakia Smer-SD & SNS coalition 42.0% combined (2023)
Spain Vox 17.8% (2023)
Sweden Sweden Democrats (SD) 20.5% (2022), supports government
Switzerland Swiss People’s Party (SVP) 27.9% (2023)
United States Republican Party (Trump) 49.9% (2024 presidential)
South Africa Democratic Alliance (DA) 21.8% (2024)
Australia Liberal Party (Coalition) 35.7% (2022)
New Zealand National Party 38.1% (2023)
United Kingdom Reform UK 14.0% (2024), 5 seats, gaining strong momentum
Guatemala National Unity of Hope (UNE) – Bernardo Arévalo (centre-right) 58.2% (2023 runoff)
El Salvador Nuevas Ideas (Bukele) 84.6% (2024 legislative)
But that is not all, as the article fails to show. Even some ‘right-wing’ parties have failed to act according to voters’ mandate because they are too embedded in and corrupted by their masters/banksters directive. Once parties like NZ National or the US Republicans have lost their base, the pendulum will swing erratically. And coalitions with other traitors will not save their a*se.
……..received £1 million from a shareholder of a UK defence company that would benefit financially from having an endless war in Ukraine……….
Link please
Plenty of links on duckduckgo for Boris Johnson and Christopher Harborne £1 million donation.
So this just came out?
In October 2025, The Guardian reported that former UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson may have encouraged the prolongation of the war in Ukraine to benefit his donor, Christopher Harborne, who owns a 13% stake in the defense company QinetiQ, which supplies drones to Ukraine. This follows a £1 million donation Harborne made to Johnson’s private company, the Office of Boris Johnson Ltd, in November 2022. The investigation revealed that Johnson met with Harborne shortly after the donation and accompanied him on a 2023 trip to Ukraine, where Harborne was listed as an adviser during meetings with Ukrainian officials, including President Volodymyr Zelensky.
The 2023 visit by Boris Johnson to Ukraine, accompanied by Christopher Harborne, had a significant business and defense-related dimensions, i.e. they are all swine with their snouts in the trough of Ukrainian and Russian blood.
Forget political labels.
You see how they act, not what they’re called.
Trump leads the conservative party.
Deport illegals, paint over rainbow crosswalks, law enforcement, secure elections, gun rights etc.
If your leaders aren’t doing these things, they’re not conservative from Americans point of view.
You could have sumed this up as describing Conservtive parties as Leftwing Globalist parties, who were previously Rightwing parties that have adopted leftwing positions to appeal to the left-leaning young people coming out of the education system (they obviously dont want to change that) but dont have the ideological firepower to flip them.
All that is left on the Rightwing are just Nationalists and Libertarians.
Conservatism is no longer Right-wing, thanks to the Boomer Gen, by choise.