The government is under growing pressure from voters as well as Conservative backbenchers to water down its proposed reforms, writes Tom Lowe
The Liberal Democrats鈥 shock victory in last Thursday鈥檚 Chesham and Amersham by-election has left the Conservative party reeling. It has also left the construction industry questioning whether the government鈥檚 proposed planning reforms, which have been widely blamed for the result, can now survive in their current form.
The poll saw Sarah Green overturn a Tory majority of 16,000 to become the Buckinghamshire constituency鈥檚 new MP with a 25% swing - the 14th largest in by-election history. Although there had been jitters among Tory campaigners over the past week, few saw the scale of the defeat coming. The Lib Dems closed the campaign at odds of 4/1 at betting site ladbrokes.com.
The result has exposed the depth of opposition to the government鈥檚 planning proposals, which would grant housing developers automatic permission on areas zoned for development by local authorities. Although councils are expected to be free to choose which areas to include in the zone, locals will no longer be able to influence individual planning decisions.
Green had zeroed in on the reforms, telling voters that the proposals posed a 鈥減articular risk鈥 to the Chilterns and suggesting that fields and ancient woodlands could be lost. She also vowed to be a 鈥渢horn in the side鈥 of HS2, which runs through the constituency.
While by-elections do not usually go well for governing parties, this one came just weeks after the Tories鈥 equally surprising win in Hartlepool, a traditional Labour seat. All eyes are now on Batley and Spen in West Yorkshire, where Labour is defending the seat formerly occupied by Jo Cox, the MP murdered in 2016. The poll takes place on 1 July.
The Conservatives have been riding a wave of success in northern 鈥渞ed wall鈥 seats, but the talk in Westminster is that they are paying the price for their focus on levelling up by shedding support in their former heartlands in the South, particularly the home counties. Lib Dem leader Ed Davey wasted no time in hammering the point home, knocking down a blue wall made of plastic bricks with a yellow hammer in a photo opportunity on Friday morning.
He said that voters across the south of England had felt taken for granted by the Conservatives, particularly on the issue of planning reforms, which he said 鈥渨ill give so much power to developers and take away from communities and not result in the affordable housing people need鈥.
Joe Harris, Lib Dem leader of Cotswold District Council, also pointed to parallels with the collapse of Labour votes in northern seats: 鈥淭he feeling is that, if immigration is the issue on which people feel left behind in the red wall and similar seats, then planning is the issue on which people feel ignored in the affluent south in traditionally Tory areas.鈥
Harris added: 鈥淚 think there is dissatisfaction with Brexit. I think maybe people are just feeling that Boris and his team are not listening.鈥
Selling the planning reforms in leafy Buckinghamshire was always going to be a risk for the Conservatives. For supporters of the changes, opposition in these southern seats can easily be seen as nimbyism. But Gleeds chairman Richard Steer, a vocal Liberal Democrat supporter, said there was more to it than that.
鈥淭he planning system is always going to be criticised but I think this has gone too far the other way. It needs greater consideration than a presumption that you can build almost anything.
鈥漈here will be an element of nimbyism, but it depends how widespread that becomes. I think it needs more care, more sensitivity.鈥
Writing in the Daily Telegraph on Saturday, Amanda Milling, the Conservative co-chair, said she heard that warning 鈥渓oud and clear鈥.
Milling, the MP for Cannock Chase, added: 鈥滻 am in no doubt that Thursday鈥檚 result is a warning shot and we are listening. And as co-chairman, I will ensure that we learn the lessons from this campaign.
鈥淥ver the coming weeks and months, we will take stock of what happened in Chesham and Amersham and look at how we can regain the trust of voters there.鈥
Milling noted that the Planning Bill has not yet been published. She said the government has been clear that any reforms would protect green spaces and still give local authorities the final say.
Meanwhile Boris Johnson said the Lib Dems鈥 campaign had been a 鈥渨ilful misunderstanding鈥 of the planning reforms. He promised that homes would not be built on green belt sites. Many in Chesham and Amersham clearly remain unconvinced.
But not everyone in the constituency would suffer from the reforms, or from HS2, which will run right through the area. SME housebuilders to whom 黑洞社区 spoke were, unsurprisingly, largely supportive of the government. More homes will mean more work for those already benefiting from a construction boom, with one contractor saying that they had 鈥渘ever been busier鈥.
Another said that they had secured a 拢130,000 job building a substation for HS2. He was an enthusiastic supporter of the project and said that opposition to it had been exaggerated. 鈥淓veryone I鈥檝e spoken to thinks it鈥檚 a good thing,鈥 he added.
Steer said that, once the railway is built, 鈥渁fter a bit, when it鈥檚 in place, and [people] are making use of it, a lot of the objections get forgotten鈥.
The by-election result will undoubtedly inflame an ongoing backbench rebellion against both the planning proposals and HS2. The scale of discontent among Tory MPs may be laid bare today - Labour has called an opposition vote in the Commons on granting communities greater control over planning decisions. The question for the Conservatives is how much of a gamble they are willing to take with their heartland seats.
Tony Blair scored huge success in the 1990s by steering Labour towards middle-class voters. If the Tories do the same with traditional Labour-supporting voters, the risk is that their 鈥渟afe鈥 southern seats suffer the same fate as Hartlepool did for Labour.
While it is now too late for HS2, the planning reforms 鈥 expected to be published this autumn 鈥 could well be watered down. Also writing in the Daily Telegraph on Saturday, Theresa Villiers, a former environment secretary, said ministers should see the by-election loss 鈥渁s an opportunity to rethink their approach to planning reform鈥.
The key unknown now is whether last Thursday鈥檚 result was a by-election blip, or the start of a shift in the public mood. For the Conservatives, making that judgment will be vital. Regardless, planning 鈥 and the extent of reform 鈥 looks likely to be the issue that will dictate the direction of politics, and the Conservatives鈥 fortunes, between now and the next general election.
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