The growing clamour for “strong leaders” that has seen the rise of authoritarian figures like Narendra Modi, Donald Trump, and Tayyip Erdogan has now caught the fancy of British voters in what is seen as a backlash against Theresa May’s pathetically weak leadership.
More than half want “a strong leader willing to break the rules,” according to a survey by Hansard Society, Britain’s premier research body on parliamentary affairs.
Its 2019 audit of political engagement in Britain makes grim reading with trust in the current political system at an all-time low amid a deepening crisis over Brexit. It found that 54 per of those polled calling for a strong, rule-breaking leader.
Some 66% said politicians should be able to say what is on their mind regardless of what anyone else thinks about their views; and 42% think many of the country’s problems could be tackled more effectively if the government didn’t have to worry about Parliament’s approval.
Most expressed a feeling of “powerlessness and disengagement” under the current system. They wanted “radical solutions” to problems even if it meant breaking rules or offending some people.
“People are pessimistic about the country’s problems and their possible solution, with sizeable numbers willing to entertain radical political changes,” the report said.
Ruth Fox, director of Hansard Society, warned that the findings threatened the “core tenets of democracy”.
“Preferring a strong leader who is willing to break the rules…would challenge core tenets of our democracy,” she said describing the results “a potentially toxic recipe for the future of British politics.”
Margaret Thatcher was the last “strong” (read “authoritarian”) leader Britain had, and her policies proved so toxic that her own party was forced to oust her. That 30 years later, Britons are apparently asking for another Thatcher says something about the times we live in.