The post-referendum reconfigurations of conservative cleavages around black and Asian minority ethnic MPs

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TitreThe post-referendum reconfigurations of conservative cleavages around black and Asian minority ethnic MPs
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2021
AuteursAlexandre-Collier A
JournalJOURNAL OF CONTEMPORARY EUROPEAN STUDIES
Volume29
Pagination391-404
Date PublishedJUL 3
Type of ArticleArticle
ISSN1478-2804
Mots-clésBrexit, Conservative Party, ethnicity, MPs, parliament, representation
Résumé

At the level of the Conservative parliamentary party, one of the main effects of Brexit has been a realignment of party cleavages. While the old cleavage between Europhiles and Eurosceptics is no longer relevant and a new cleavage has appeared between soft and hard Brexiteers, this political upheaval has thus restructured Conservative ideological pluralism in the parliamentary party. Following a study of the 2015 intake of MPs who were supposedly `less stale, male and pale' and their attitudes to the 2016 British referendum on the EU, this article will take a specific interest in all Conservative Black and Asian Minority Ethnic (BAME) MPs who turned out to be more active on the `leave' side of the referendum campaign. They arguably embody a new feature of Conservative pluralism by operating a synthesis between inclusive modernisation and hard Brexit. Although the party should capitalise on this group of MPs to rid itself of its persistent image of a `nasty' party pervaded with anti-immigration sentiment and hard Eurosceptic populism - an expression used by Theresa May in 2002 -, the strategy of `detoxifying' the Brexit brand did not seem to have ever been part of her priorities as Prime Minister.

DOI10.1080/14782804.2020.1745161